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BB-SE408-T

BB-SE408-T

  • 厂商:

    B+BSMARTWORX

  • 封装:

  • 描述:

    NETWORK SWITCH-MANAGED 8 PORT

  • 数据手册
  • 价格&库存
BB-SE408-T 数据手册
SE400 Series USER MANUAL SE400 SERIES Advantech B+B SmartWorx - Americas 707 Dayton Road Ottawa, IL 61350 USA Phone (815) 433-5100 Fax (815) 433-5105 Advantech B+B SmartWorx - European Headquarters Westlink Commercial Park Oranmore, Co. Galway, Ireland Phone +353 91-792444 Fax +353 91-792445 www.advantech-bb.com support@advantech-bb.com Document: SE400 Series_R0_xx15m ii SE400 SERIES CONTENTS Product Overview......................................................... 1 Supported Models............................................................................................................................ 1 Specifications................................................................................................................................... 1 Hardware Views............................................................................................................................... 3 Front View................................................................................................................................. 3 Rear View ................................................................................................................................. 8 Top View................................................................................................................................... 9 Bottom View............................................................................................................................ 10 Switch Installation...................................................... 12 Installation Guidelines.................................................................................................................... 12 Connecting Hardware ............................................................................................................. 12 Verifying Switch Operation ............................................................................................................ 12 Installing the Switch ....................................................................................................................... 13 DIN Rail Mounting................................................................................................................... 13 Wall-Mounting......................................................................................................................... 15 Installing and Removing SFP Modules .......................................................................................... 17 Installing SFP Modules ........................................................................................................... 17 Removing SFP Modules ......................................................................................................... 19 Connecting the Switch to Ethernet Ports ....................................................................................... 20 RJ45 Ethernet Cable Wiring ................................................................................................... 20 Power Supply Installation .............................................................................................................. 20 Overview................................................................................................................................. 20 Considerations........................................................................................................................ 21 Grounding the Device ............................................................................................................. 22 Wiring a Relay Contact ........................................................................................................... 23 Wiring the Power Inputs.......................................................................................................... 23 Managing Switch ........................................................ 26 First Time set up ........................................................................................................................... 26 Overview................................................................................................................................. 26 SCADA Requirements ............................................................................................................ 26 Administrative Interface Access.............................................................................................. 26 Using the Graphical (Web) Interface ...................................................................................... 27 Configuring the Switch for Network Access............................................................................ 27 Configuring the Ethernet Ports ............................................................................................... 27 Web Browser Configuration ........................................................................................................... 29 Preparing for Web Configuration ............................................................................................ 29 Log In ............................................................................................................................................. 29 Recommended Practices............................................................................................................... 30 Changing Default Password ................................................................................................... 30 Monitoring ...................................................................................................................................... 31 Device Information.................................................................................................................. 31 Logging Message ................................................................................................................... 32 Port Monitoring ....................................................................................................................... 33 Link Aggregation..................................................................................................................... 34 LLDP Statistics ....................................................................................................................... 34 IGMP Statistics ....................................................................................................................... 35 iii SE400 SERIES System ........................................................................................................................................... 36 IP Settings .............................................................................................................................. 36 DHCP Client Option 82........................................................................................................... 37 DHCP Auto Provision ............................................................................................................. 38 IPv6 Settings........................................................................................................................... 38 Management VLAN ................................................................................................................ 39 System Time........................................................................................................................... 40 L2 Switching .................................................................................................................................. 41 Port Configuration................................................................................................................... 41 Port Mirror............................................................................................................................... 42 Link Aggregation..................................................................................................................... 43 802.1Q VLAN.......................................................................................................................... 46 GARP...................................................................................................................................... 49 802.3az EEE........................................................................................................................... 50 Multicast.................................................................................................................................. 51 SCADA Requirements ............................................................................................................ 51 Jumbo Frame.......................................................................................................................... 56 Spanning Tree ........................................................................................................................ 57 X-Ring Elite............................................................................................................................. 62 Loopback Detection ................................................................................................................ 63 MAC Address Table....................................................................................................................... 65 Static MAC.............................................................................................................................. 65 MAC Aging Time..................................................................................................................... 66 Dynamic Forwarding Table..................................................................................................... 66 Security .......................................................................................................................................... 67 Storm Control.......................................................................................................................... 67 Port Security ........................................................................................................................... 69 Protected Ports ....................................................................................................................... 69 DoS Prevention....................................................................................................................... 70 Applications ............................................................................................................................ 72 802.1x ..................................................................................................................................... 73 QoS................................................................................................................................................ 75 General ................................................................................................................................... 75 QoS Basic Mode..................................................................................................................... 81 Rate Limit................................................................................................................................ 82 Management .................................................................................................................................. 84 LLDP....................................................................................................................................... 84 SNMP ..................................................................................................................................... 87 Diagnostics .................................................................................................................................... 91 Cable Diagnostics................................................................................................................... 91 Ping Test................................................................................................................................. 92 IPv6 Ping Test ........................................................................................................................ 93 System Log............................................................................................................................. 94 DDM........................................................................................................................................ 97 Tools .............................................................................................................................................. 98 IXM ......................................................................................................................................... 98 Backup Manager..................................................................................................................... 99 Upgrade Manager................................................................................................................. 100 Dual Image ........................................................................................................................... 101 Save Configuration ............................................................................................................... 101 User Account ........................................................................................................................ 102 Reset System ....................................................................................................................... 102 Reboot Device ...................................................................................................................... 102 iv SE400 SERIES Troubleshooting ....................................................... 103 Advantech B+B Smartworx Technical support ..... 103 v SE400 SERIES LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1: Figure 2: Figure 3: Figure 4: Figure 5: Figure 6: Figure 7: Figure 8: Figure 9: Figure 10: Figure 11: Figure 12: Figure 13: Figure 14: Figure 15: Figure 16: Figure 17: Figure 18: Figure 19: Figure 20: Figure 21: Figure 22: Figure 23: Figure 24: Figure 25: Figure 26: Figure 27: Figure 28: Figure 29: Figure 30: Figure 31: Figure 32: Figure 33: Figure 34: Figure 35: Figure 36: Figure 37: Figure 38: Figure 39: Figure 40: Figure 41: Figure 42: Figure 43: Figure 44: Figure 45: Figure 46: Figure 47: Figure 48: Figure 49: Figure 50: Figure 51: Figure 52: Figure 53: Figure 54: Figure 55: Front View .......................................................................................................................... 3 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 4 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 5 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 6 System LED Panel ............................................................................................................. 7 Rear View ........................................................................................................................... 8 Rear View ........................................................................................................................... 9 Top View............................................................................................................................. 9 Top View........................................................................................................................... 10 Bottom View ..................................................................................................................... 10 Bottom View ..................................................................................................................... 11 Installing the DIN-Rail Mounting Kit.................................................................................. 13 Removing the DIN-Rail..................................................................................................... 14 Installing Wall Mount Plates ............................................................................................. 15 Securing Wall Mounting Screws....................................................................................... 16 Wall Mount Installation ..................................................................................................... 16 Removing the Dust Plug from an SFP Slot ...................................................................... 17 Installing an SFP Transceiver........................................................................................... 18 Attaching a Fiber Optic Cable to a Transceiver................................................................ 18 Removing a Fiber Optic Cable to a Transceiver............................................................... 19 Removing an SFP Transceiver......................................................................................... 19 Ethernet Plug & Connector Pin Position........................................................................... 20 Power Wiring for SE400 Series ........................................................................................ 21 Grounding Connection...................................................................................................... 22 Terminal Receptor: Relay Contact ................................................................................... 23 Terminal Receptor: Power Input Contacts........................................................................ 23 Removing a Terminal Block.............................................................................................. 24 Installing DC Wires in a Terminal Block ........................................................................... 24 Installing DC Wires in a Terminal Block ........................................................................... 24 Securing a Terminal Block to a Receptor ......................................................................... 25 Login Screen .................................................................................................................... 29 Changing a Default Password .......................................................................................... 30 Monitoring > Device Information....................................................................................... 31 Monitoring > Logging Message ........................................................................................ 32 Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Statistics .................................................................. 33 Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Utilization ................................................................. 33 Monitoring > LLDP Statistics ............................................................................................ 34 Monitoring > IGMP Statistics ............................................................................................ 35 System > IP Settings ........................................................................................................ 36 System > DHCP Client Option 82..................................................................................... 37 System > DHCP Auto Provision ....................................................................................... 38 System > IPv6 Settings .................................................................................................... 38 System > Management VLAN .......................................................................................... 39 System > System Time..................................................................................................... 40 L2 Switching > Port Configuration .................................................................................... 41 L2 Switching > Port Mirror ................................................................................................ 42 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > Load Balance ............................................................ 43 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Management..................................................... 43 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Port Settings ..................................................... 44 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Priority Settings .............................................. 45 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Port Settings ................................................... 45 L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > VLAN Management ....................................................... 46 L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > PVID Settings ................................................................ 47 L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > Port to VLAN.................................................................. 48 L2 Switching > GARP > GARP Settings........................................................................... 49 vi SE400 SERIES Figure 56: Figure 57: Figure 58: Figure 59: Figure 60: Figure 61: Figure 62: Figure 63: Figure 64: Figure 65: Figure 66: Figure 67: Figure 68: Figure 69: Figure 70: Figure 71: Figure 72: Figure 73: Figure 74: Figure 75: Figure 76: Figure 77: Figure 78: Figure 79: Figure 80: Figure 81: Figure 82: Figure 83: Figure 84: Figure 85: Figure 86: Figure 87: Figure 88: Figure 89: Figure 90: Figure 91: Figure 92: Figure 93: Figure 94: Figure 95: Figure 96: Figure 97: Figure 98: Figure 99: Figure 100: Figure 101: Figure 102: Figure 103: Figure 104: Figure 105: Figure 106: Figure 107: Figure 108: Figure 109: Figure 110: Figure 111: Figure 112: Figure 113: L2 Switching > GARP > GVRP Settings........................................................................... 50 L2 Switching > 802.3az EEE ............................................................................................ 50 L2 Switching > Multicast > Multicast Filtering................................................................... 51 L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Settings .......................................... 52 L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Querier ........................................... 52 L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Static Groups ................................. 53 L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Settings ............................................. 54 L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Querier .............................................. 55 L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Static Group ...................................... 55 L2 Switching > Jumbo Frame ........................................................................................... 56 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Global Settings ..................................................... 57 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Settings......................................................... 58 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Bridge Settings ..................................................... 59 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Advanced Settings........................................ 60 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Config Identification ............................................. 60 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance ID Settings............................................. 61 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance Priority Settings ..................................... 61 L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Settings ......................................................... 62 L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Groups .......................................................... 63 L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Global Settings..................................................... 63 L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Port Settings......................................................... 64 MAC Address Table > Static MAC ................................................................................... 65 MAC Address Table > MAC Aging Time .......................................................................... 66 MAC Address Table > Dynamic Forwarding Table .......................................................... 66 Security > Storm Control > Global Settings...................................................................... 67 Security > Storm Control > Port Settings.......................................................................... 68 Security > Port Security .................................................................................................... 69 Security > Protected Ports................................................................................................ 69 Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Global Settings........................................................... 70 Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Port Settings............................................................... 72 Security > Applications > HTTP........................................................................................ 72 Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Settings................................................................................. 73 Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Port Configuration................................................................. 74 QoS > General > QoS Properties..................................................................................... 75 QoS > General > QoS Settings ........................................................................................ 76 QoS > General > QoS Scheduling ................................................................................... 77 QoS > General > CoS Mapping........................................................................................ 78 QoS > General > DSCP Mapping..................................................................................... 79 QoS > General > IP Precedence Mapping ....................................................................... 80 QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Global Settings....................................................................... 81 QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Port Settings........................................................................... 81 QoS > Rate Limit > Ingress Bandwidth Control................................................................ 82 QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Bandwidth Control ................................................................ 83 QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Queue ................................................................................... 83 Management > LLDP > LLDP System Settings ............................................................... 84 Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > LLDP Port Configuration.......................... 85 Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > Optional TLVs Selection .......................... 85 Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > VLAN Name TLV VLAN Selection ........... 86 Management > LLDP > LLDP Remote Device Info.......................................................... 86 Management > SNMP > SNMP Settings.......................................................................... 87 Management > SNMP > SNMP Community .................................................................... 88 Management > SNMP > SNMP User Settings ................................................................. 89 Management > SNMP > SNMP Trap ............................................................................... 90 Diagnostics > Cable Diagnostics ...................................................................................... 91 Diagnostics > Ping Test.................................................................................................... 92 Diagnostics > IPv6 Ping Test............................................................................................ 93 Diagnostics > System Log > Logging Service .................................................................. 94 Diagnostics > System Log > Local Logging ..................................................................... 95 vii SE400 SERIES Figure 114: Figure 115: Figure 116: Figure 117: Figure 118: Figure 119: Figure 120: Figure 121: Diagnostics > System Log > System Log Server ............................................................. 96 Diagnostics > DDM........................................................................................................... 97 Diagnostics > DDM > Diagnostic Alarm Information ........................................................ 97 Tools > IXM ...................................................................................................................... 98 Tools > Backup Manager.................................................................................................. 99 Tools > Upgrade Manager.............................................................................................. 100 Tools > Dual Image ........................................................................................................ 101 Tools > User Account ..................................................................................................... 102 viii SE400 SERIES LIST OF TABLES Table 1: Table 2: Table 3: Table 4: Table 5: Table 6: Table 7: Table 8: Table 9: Table 10: Table 11: Table 12: Table 13: Table 14: Table 15: Table 16: Table 17: Table 18: Table 19: Table 20: Table 21: Table 22: Table 23: Table 24: Table 25: Table 26: Table 27: Table 28: Table 29: Table 30: Table 31: Table 32: Table 33: Table 34: Table 35: Table 36: Table 37: Table 38: Table 39: Table 40: Table 41: Table 42: Table 43: Table 44: Table 45: Table 46: Table 47: Table 48: Table 49: Table 50: Table 51: Table 52: Table 53: Table 54: Table 55: Standard Models ................................................................................................................ 1 Wide Temperature Models ................................................................................................. 1 Specifications ..................................................................................................................... 1 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 3 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 4 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 5 Front View .......................................................................................................................... 6 System LED Panel ............................................................................................................. 7 Rear View ........................................................................................................................... 8 Rear View ........................................................................................................................... 9 Top View............................................................................................................................. 9 Top View........................................................................................................................... 10 Bottom View ..................................................................................................................... 10 Bottom View ..................................................................................................................... 11 Pin Definition .................................................................................................................... 20 Monitoring > Device Information....................................................................................... 31 Monitoring > Logging Message ........................................................................................ 32 Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Statistics .................................................................. 33 Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Utilization ................................................................. 33 Monitoring > LLDP Statistics ............................................................................................ 34 Monitoring > IGMP Statistics ............................................................................................ 35 System > IP Settings ........................................................................................................ 36 System > DHCP Client Option 82..................................................................................... 37 System > DHCP Auto Provision ....................................................................................... 38 System > IPv6 Settings .................................................................................................... 38 System > Management VLAN .......................................................................................... 39 System > System Time..................................................................................................... 40 L2 Switching > Port Configuration .................................................................................... 41 L2 Switching > Port Mirror ................................................................................................ 42 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > Load Balance ............................................................ 43 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Management..................................................... 43 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Port Settings ..................................................... 44 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Priority Settings .............................................. 45 L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Port Settings ................................................... 45 L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > VLAN Management ....................................................... 46 L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > PVID Settings ................................................................ 47 L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > Port to VLAN.................................................................. 48 L2 Switching > GARP > GARP Settings........................................................................... 49 L2 Switching > GARP > GVRP Settings........................................................................... 50 L2 Switching > 802.3az EEE ............................................................................................ 50 L2 Switching > Multicast > Multicast Filtering................................................................... 51 L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Settings .......................................... 52 L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Querier ........................................... 53 L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Static Groups ................................. 53 L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Settings ............................................. 54 L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Querier .............................................. 55 L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Static Group ...................................... 55 L2 Switching > Jumbo Frame ........................................................................................... 56 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Global Settings ..................................................... 57 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Settings......................................................... 58 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Bridge Settings ..................................................... 59 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Advanced Settings........................................ 60 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Config Identification ............................................. 60 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance ID Settings............................................. 61 L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance Priority Settings ..................................... 61 ix SE400 SERIES Table 56: Table 57: Table 58: Table 59: Table 60: Table 61: Table 62: Table 63: Table 64: Table 65: Table 66: Table 67: Table 68: Table 69: Table 70: Table 71: Table 72: Table 73: Table 74: Table 75: Table 76: Table 77: Table 78: Table 79: Table 80: Table 81: Table 82: Table 83: Table 84: Table 85: Table 86: Table 87: Table 88: Table 89: Table 90: Table 91: Table 92: Table 93: Table 94: Table 95: Table 96: Table 97: Table 98: Table 99: Table 100: Table 101: Table 102: Table 103: L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Settings ......................................................... 62 L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Global Settings..................................................... 63 L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Port Settings......................................................... 64 MAC Address Table > Static MAC ................................................................................... 65 MAC Address Table > MAC Aging Time .......................................................................... 66 MAC Address Table > Dynamic Forwarding Table .......................................................... 66 Security > Storm Control > Global Settings...................................................................... 67 Security > Storm Control > Port Settings.......................................................................... 68 Security > Port Security .................................................................................................... 69 Security > Protected Ports................................................................................................ 69 Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Global Settings........................................................... 71 Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Port Settings............................................................... 72 Security > Applications > HTTP........................................................................................ 72 Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Settings................................................................................. 73 Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Port Configuration................................................................. 74 QoS > General > QoS Properties..................................................................................... 75 QoS > General > QoS Settings ........................................................................................ 76 QoS > General > QoS Scheduling ................................................................................... 77 QoS > General > CoS Mapping........................................................................................ 78 QoS > General > DSCP Mapping..................................................................................... 79 QoS > General > IP Precedence Mapping ....................................................................... 80 QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Global Settings....................................................................... 81 QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Port Settings........................................................................... 81 QoS > Rate Limit > Ingress Bandwidth Control................................................................ 82 QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Bandwidth Control ................................................................ 83 QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Queue ................................................................................... 83 Management > LLDP > LLDP System Settings ............................................................... 84 Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > LLDP Port Configuration.......................... 85 Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > Optional TLVs Selection .......................... 85 Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > VLAN Name TLV VLAN Selection ........... 86 Management > LLDP > LLDP Remote Device Info.......................................................... 86 Management > SNMP > SNMP Settings.......................................................................... 87 Management > SNMP > SNMP Community .................................................................... 88 Management > SNMP > SNMP User Settings ................................................................. 89 Management > SNMP > SNMP Trap ............................................................................... 90 Diagnostics > Cable Diagnostics ...................................................................................... 91 Diagnostics > Ping Test.................................................................................................... 92 Diagnostics > IPv6 Ping Test............................................................................................ 93 Diagnostics > System Log > Logging Service .................................................................. 94 Diagnostics > System Log > Local Logging ..................................................................... 95 Diagnostics > System Log > System Log Server ............................................................. 96 Diagnostics > DDM........................................................................................................... 97 Diagnostics > DDM > Diagnostic Alarm Information ........................................................ 97 Tools > IXM ...................................................................................................................... 98 Tools > Backup Manager.................................................................................................. 99 Tools > Upgrade Manager.............................................................................................. 100 Tools > Dual Image ........................................................................................................ 101 Tools > User Account ..................................................................................................... 102 x SE400 SERIES DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY CE This product has passed the CE test for environmental specifications when shielded cables are used for external wiring. We recommend the use of shielded cables. This kind of cable is available from Advantech. Please contact your local supplier for ordering information. This product has passed the CE test for environmental specifications. Test conditions for passing included the equipment being operated within an industrial enclosure. In order to protect the product from being damaged by ESD (Electrostatic Discharge) and EMI leakage, we strongly recommend the use of CE-compliant industrial enclosure products. FCC Class A This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense. Safety Instructions               Read these safety instructions carefully. Keep this user manual for later reference. Disconnect this equipment from any AC outlet before cleaning. Use damp cloth. Do not use liquid or spray detergents for cleaning. For plug-in equipment, the power outlet socket must be located near the equipment and must be easily accessible. Keep this equipment away from humidity. Put this equipment on a reliable surface during installation. Dropping it or letting it fall may cause damage. The openings on the enclosure are for air convection. Protect the equipment from overheating. DO NOT COVER THE OPENINGS. Make sure the voltage of the power source is correct before connecting the equipment to the power outlet. Position the power cord so that people cannot step on it. Do not place anything over the power cord. All cautions and warning on the equipment should be noted. If the equipment is not used for a long time, disconnect it from the power source to avoid damage by transient over voltage. Never pour any liquid into an opening. This may cause fire or electrical shock. Never open the equipment. For safety reasons, the equipment should be opened only by qualified service personnel. If one of the following situations arises, get the equipment checked by service personnel: – The power cord or plug is damaged. – Liquid has penetrated into the equipment. xi SE400 SERIES    – The equipment has been exposed to moisture. – The equipment does not work well, or you cannot get it to work according to the user manual – The equipment has been dropped and damaged. – The equipment has obvious signs of breakage. Instructions for installation in a pollution Degree 2 environment or equivalent statement. PoE requirements: This product was in-door used and not connected to outside plant, so user manual shall have the description as below or equivalent: “The equipment is to be connected only to PoE networks without routing to the outside plant.” Do NOT LEAVE THIS EQUIPMENT IN AN ENVIRONMENT WHERE THE STORAGE TEMPERATURE MAY GO BELOW -40°C(-40°F) OR ABOVE 75°C(167°F) THIS COULD DAMAGE THE EQUIPMENT. THE EQUIPMENT SHOULD BE IN A CONTROLLED ENVIRONMENT. PRODUCT WARRANTY – LIMITED LIFETIME Effective for products of Advantech B+B SmartWorx shipped on or after May 1, 2013, Advantech B+B SmartWorx warrants that each such product shall be free from defects in material and workmanship for its lifetime. This limited lifetime warranty is applicable solely to the original user and is not transferable. Power supplies are exempt from the limited lifetime warranty and are covered by a six year warranty. This warranty is expressly conditioned upon proper storage, installation, connection, operation and maintenance of products in accordance with their written specifications. Pursuant to the warranty, within the warranty period, Advantech B+B SmartWorx, at its option will: 1. Replace the product with a functional equivalent; 2. Repair the product; or 3. Provide a partial refund of purchase price based on a depreciated value. Products of other manufacturers sold by Advantech B+B SmartWorx are not subject to any warranty or indemnity offered by Advantech B+B SmartWorx, but may be subject to the warranties of the other manufacturers. Notwithstanding the foregoing, under no circumstances shall Advantech B+B SmartWorx have any warranty obligations or any other liability for: (i) any defects resulting from wear and tear, accident, improper use by the buyer or use by any third party except in accordance with the written instructions or advice of the Advantech B+B SmartWorx or the manufacturer of the products, including without limitation surge and overvoltage conditions that exceed specified ratings, (ii) any products which have been adjusted, modified or repaired by any party other than Advantech B+B SmartWorx or (iii) any descriptions, illustrations, figures as to performance, drawings and particulars of weights and dimensions contained in the Advantech B+B SmartWorx' catalogs, price lists, marketing materials or elsewhere since they are merely intended to represent a general idea of the products and do not form part of this price quote and do not constitute a warranty of any kind, whether express or implied, as to any of the Advantech B+B SmartWorx’s products. THE REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF THE DEFECTIVE ITEMS IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE EXPRESS WARRANTY SET FORTH ABOVE IS ADVANTECH B+B SMARTWORX SOLE OBLIGATION UNDER THIS WARRANTY. THE WARRANTY CONTAINED IN THIS SECTION SHALL EXTEND TO THE ORIGINAL USER ONLY, IS IN LIEU OF ANY AND ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AND ALL SUCH WARRANTIES AND INDEMNITIES ARE EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION (I) THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND OF MERxii SE400 SERIES CHANTABILITY AND (II) ANY WARRANTY THAT THE PRODUCTS ARE DO NOT INFRINGE OR VIOLATE THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS OF ANY THIRD PARTY. IN NO EVENT SHALL ADVANTECH B+B SMARTWORX BE LIABLE FOR LOSS OF BUSINESS, LOSS OF USE OR OF DATA INTERRUPTION OF BUSINESS, LOST PROFITS OR GOODWILL OR OTHER SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, EXEMPLARY OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES. ADVANTECH B+B SMARTWORX SHALL DISREGARD AND NOT BE BOUND BY ANY REPRESENTATIONS, WARRANTIES OR INDEMNITIES MADE BY ANY OTHER PERSON, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION EMPLOYEES, DISTRIBUTORS, RESELLERS OR DEALERS OF ADVANTECH B+B SMARTWORX WHICH ARE INCONSISTENT WITH THE WARRANTY, SET FORTH ABOVE. RETURNS POLICY Eligible items returned within 30 days of purchase qualify for a full refund (less shipping charges). Advantech B+B SmartWorx has the option to accept returns of products 30 days after the date of purchase and such returns are subject to a restocking fee of up to 20%. Software is not returnable if opened. Advantech B+B SmartWorx will not accept returns of products that were modified by a customer. All custom orders are non-returnable and noncancelable. REPAIR SERVICE: We offer a repair service for our products. Please call, FAX, or e-mail to request a Return Material Authorization (RMA) number and routing instructions. Shipping charges and any duties, taxes or brokerage fees are the customer's responsibility. RETURN AND REPAIR CONTACT INFORMATION Phone: (815) 433-5100 7:00 AM - 7:00 PM CST Fax: (815) 433-5109 Email: orders@advantech-bb.com WARNINGS, CAUTIONS AND NOTES Warning! Warnings indicate conditions, which if not observed, can cause personal injury! Caution! Cautions are included to help you avoid damaging hardware or losing data. e.g. There is a danger of a new battery exploding if it is incorrectly installed. Do not attempt to recharge, force open, or heat the battery. Replace the battery only with the same or equivalent type recommended by the manufacturer. Discard used batteries according to the manufacturer's instructions. Note! Notes provide optional additional information. xiii SE400 SERIES PRODUCT OVERVIEW Supported Models Standard Models: Table 1: Standard Models SE408 SEC410-2SFP SE416 SEC418-2SFP Wide Temperature Models: Table 2: Wide Temperature Models SE408-EI-T SE408-PN-T SE408-PNMA-T SE408-T SEC410-2SFP-EI-T SEC410-2SFP-PN-T SEC410-2SFP-T SE416-EI-T SE416-PN-T SE416-T SEC418-2SFP-EI-T SEC418-2SFP-PN-T SEC418-2SFP-T Specifications Table 3: Specifications Specifications Description Interface I/O Port     SE408 series: 8 x 10/100BaseT(X) SE416 series: 16 x 10/100BaseT(X) SEC410 series: 8 x 10/100BaseT(X) + 2 x 10/100BaseT(X) or 100Base-FX SFP SEC418 series: 16 x 10/100BaseT(X) + 2 x 10/100BaseT(X) or 100Base-FX SFP Power Connector 6-pin screw Terminal Block (including relay) Physical Enclosure Metal Shell Protection Class IP30 Installation DIN-Rail and Wall-Mount Dimensions (W x H x D)     LED Display SE408 series: 43mm x 120mm x 84mm (1.69in x 4.72in x 3.3in) SE416 series: 74mm x 120mm x 84mm (2.91in x 4.72in x 3.3in) SEC410 series: 74mm x 120mm x 84mm (2.91in x 4.72in x 3.3in SEC418 series: 74mm x 120mm x 84mm (2.91in x 4.72in x 3.3in System LED PWR1, PWR2, P-Fail, Loop detection PoE Port LED Link / Speed / Activity 1 SE400 SERIES Table 3: Specifications (Continued) Specifications Description Environment Operating Temperature Standard Temperature: -10°C ~ 60°C (14°F ~ 140°F) Wide Temperature: -40°C ~ 75°C (-40°F ~ 167°F) Storage Temperature -40°C ~ 85° C (-40°F ~ 185° F) Ambient Relative 10 ~ 95% (non-condensing) Humidity Switch Properties MAC Address Power Certifications 8K entries Switching Bandwidth     SE408 series : 1.6Gbps SE416 series : 3.2Gbps SEC410 series: 5.6Gbps SEC418 series: 7.2Gbps Power Consumption     SE408 series: 5.2 watts SE416 series: 8 watts SEC410 series: 5.8 watts SEC418 series: 8.2 watts Power Input 12V ~ 48V (8.4V ~ 52.8V), redundant dual inputs Safety   IEC/EN 60950-1, UL508 Class 1 Division 2, IECEx, ATEX EMC CE, FCC EMI EN 55011/ 55022 Class A, EN 61000-6-4, FCC Part 15 Subpart B Class A EMS        Shock IEC 60068-2-27 EN 55024/ EN 61000-6-2 EN 61000-4-2 (ESD) Level 3 EN 61000-4-3 (RS) Level 3 EN 61000-4-4 (EFT) Level 3 EN 61000-4-5 (Surge) Level 3 EN 61000-4-6 (CS) Level 3 EN 61000-4-8 (Magnetic Field) Level 3 Freefall IEC 60068-2-32 Vibration IEC 60068-2-6 2 SE400 SERIES Hardware Views Front View The following view applies to SE408 series. SE408 Loop P-Fail P1 P2 1 1 5 2 6 3 7 4 8 2 3 4 10/100 Figure 1: Front View Table 4: Front View No. Item Description 1 System LED panel See “System LED Panel” on page 7 for further details. 2 ETH port Eight 10/100BaseT(X) ports. 3 LNK/ACT LED Link activity LED. 4 Speed LED   Gigabit Ethernet: – Green: 1000M – Amber: 100M – Off: 10M Fast Ethernet: – Amber: 100M – Off: 10M 3 SE400 SERIES The following view applies to SE416 series. SE416 Loop P1 P-Fail P2 1 LNK 5 9 13 2 6 10 14 3 7 11 15 4 8 12 16 1 SPD 2 3 4 10/100 10/100 Figure 2: Front View Table 5: Front View No. Item Description 1 System LED panel See “System LED Panel” on page 7 for further details. 2 ETH port Sixteen 10/100BaseT(X) ports. 3 LNK/ACT LED Link activity LED. 4 Speed LED  Fast Ethernet: – Amber: 100M – Off: 10M 4 SE400 SERIES The following view applies to SEC410 series. SEC410-2SFP Loop P1 P2 P-F 1 LNK 6 5 1 SPD 9 2 6 3 7 5 2 10/100/1000 9 10 3 LNK/ACT 8 4 5 4 10 10/100 6 10/100/1000 Figure 3: Front View Table 6: Front View No. Item Description 1 System LED panel See “System LED Panel” on page 7 for further details. 2 ETH port Eight 10/100BaseT(X) ports + two 100/1000BaseT(X) combo ports. 3 LNK/ACT LED Link activity LED. 4 Speed LED  5 ETH port Two 10/100/1000BaseT(X) ports. 6 ETH port Two 100/1000Base-FX SFP ports. Gigabit Ethernet: – Green: 1000M – Amber: 100M – Off: 10M 5 SE400 SERIES The following view applies to SEC418 series. 10/100 SEC418-2SFP Loop P1 P2 P-F 1 9 13 10 14 1 5 2 6 3 7 4 8 11 2 15 12 16 3 5 4 10/100 17 18 6 10/100/1000 Figure 4: Front View Table 7: Front View No. Item Description 1 System LED panel See “System LED Panel” on page 7 for further details. 2 ETH port Sixteen 10/100BaseT(X) ports + two 100/1000BaseT(X) combo ports. 3 LNK/ACT LED Link activity LED. 4 Speed LED  5 ETH port Two 10/100/1000BaseT(X) ports. 6 ETH port Two 100/1000Base-FX SFP ports. Gigabit Ethernet: – Green: 1000M – Amber: 100M – Off: 10M 6 SE400 SERIES System LED Panel P1 P2 3 4 Loop 2 P-Fail 1 Figure 5: System LED Panel Table 8: System LED Panel No. LED Name LED Color Description 1 PW1 LED Solid green Powered up. Off Powered down or not installed. 2 PW2 LED Solid green Powered up. Off Powered down or not installed. When PW1 or PW2 is disconnected, the LED lights. 3 P-Fail Solid red Off When PW1 and PW2 is connected, the LED is off. 4 Loop Solid red When loop detected, the LED lights. Off No loop detected. 7 SE400 SERIES Rear View The following view applies to SE408 series. 1 Figure 6: Rear View Table 9: Rear View No. Item Description 1 DIN-Rail mounting plate Mounting plate used for the installation to a standard DIN rail. 8 SE400 SERIES The following view applies to SE416, SEC410, SEC418 series. 1 Figure 7: Rear View Table 10: Rear View No. Item Description 1 DIN-Rail mounting plate Mounting plate used for the installation to a standard DIN rail. Top View The following view applies to SE408 series. DC 12-48V PWR2 1A@24V PWR1 1 V2- V2+ P-Fail V1- V1+ Figure 8: Top View Table 11: Top View No. Item Description 1 Terminal block Connect cabling for power and alarm wiring. 9 SE400 SERIES The following view applies to SE416, SEC410, SEC418 series. DC 12-48V PWR2 1A@24V PWR1 1 V2- V2+ P-Fail V1- V1+ Figure 9: Top View Table 12: Top View No. Item Description 1 Terminal block Connect cabling for power and alarm wiring. Bottom View The following view applies to SE408 series. 1 Figure 10: Bottom View Table 13: Bottom View No. Item Description 1 Ground terminal Screw terminal used to ground chassis. 10 SE400 SERIES The following view applies to SE416, SEC410, SEC418 series. 1 Figure 11: Bottom View Table 14: Bottom View No. Item Description 1 Ground terminal Screw terminal used to ground chassis. 11 SE400 SERIES SWITCH INSTALLATION Installation Guidelines The following guidelines are provided to optimize the device performance. Review the guidelines before installing the device.  Make sure cabling is away from sources of electrical noise. Radios, power lines, and fluorescent lighting fixtures can interference with the device performance.  Make sure the cabling is positioned away from equipment that can damage the cables.  Operating environment is within the ranges listed range, see “Specifications” on page 1.  Relative humidity around the switch does not exceed 95 percent (noncondensing).  Altitude at the installation site is not higher than 10,000 feet.  In 10/100 fixed port devices, the cable length from the switch to connected devices can not exceed 100 meters (328 feet).  Make sure airflow around the switch and respective vents is unrestricted. Without proper airflow the switch can overheat. To prevent performance degradation and damage to the switch, make sure there is clearance at the top and bottom and around the exhaust vents. Connecting Hardware These instructions will explain how to find a proper location for your Modbus Gateways, how to connect to the network, hook up the power cable, and connect to the SE400 Series. Verifying Switch Operation Before installing the device in a rack or on a wall, power on the switch to verify that the switch passes the power-on self-test (POST). To connect the cabling to the power source see “Power Supply Installation” on page 20. At startup (POST), the System LED blinks green, while the remaining LEDs are a solid green. Once the switch passes POST self-test, the System LED turns green. The other LEDs turn off and return to their operating status. If the switch fails POST, the System LED switches to an amber state. After a successful self-test, power down the switch and disconnect the power cabling. The switch is now ready for installation on its final location. 12 SE400 SERIES Installing the Switch DIN Rail Mounting The DIN rail mount option is the quickest installation option. Additionally, it optimizes the use of rail space. The metal DIN rail kit is secured to the rear of the switch. The device can be mounted onto a standard 35mm (1.37”) x 75 mm (3”) height DIN rail. The devices can be mounted vertically or horizontally. Refer to the following guidelines for further information. Note! A corrosion-free mounting rail is advisable. When installing, make sure to allow for enough space to properly install the cabling. Installing the DIN-Rail Mounting Kit 1. Insert the top back of the mounting bracket over the DIN rail. 2. Push the bottom of the switch towards the DIN rail until it snaps into place. 1 DIN Rail 2 Figure 12: Installing the DIN-Rail Mounting Kit 13 SE400 SERIES Removing the DIN-Rail Mounting Kit 1. Push the switch down to free the bottom of the plate from the DIN rail. 2. Rotate the bottom of the device towards you and away from the DIN rail. 3. Once the bottom is clear of the DIN rail, lift the device straight up to unhook it from the DIN rail. 1 DIN Rail 2 Figure 13: Removing the DIN-Rail 14 SE400 SERIES Wall-Mounting The wall mounting option provides better shock and vibration resistance than the DIN rail vertical mount. Note! When installing, make sure to allow for enough space to properly install the cabling. Before the device can be mounted on a wall, you will need to remove the DIN rail plate. 1. Rotate the device to the rear side and locate the DIN mounting plate. 2. Remove the screws securing the DIN mounting plate to the rear panel of the switch. 3. Remove the DIN mounting plate. Store the DIN mounting plate and provided screws for later use. 4. Align the wall mounting plates on the rear side. The screw holes on the device and the mounting plates must be aligned, see the following illustration. 5. Secure the wall mount plates with M3 screws, see the following figure. Figure 14: Installing Wall Mount Plates Once the wall mounting plates are secure on the device, you will need to attach the wall screws (x3). 15 SE400 SERIES 6. Locate the installation site and place the switch against the wall, making sure it is the final installation location. 7. Use the wall mount plates as a guide to mark the locations of the screw holes. 8. Drill four holes over the four marked locations on the wall, keeping in mind that the holes must accommodate wall sinks in addition to the screws. 9. Insert the wall sinks into the walls. 10. Insert the screws into the wall sinks. Leave a 2 mm gap between the wall and the screw head to allow for wall mount plate insertion. 4.5 mm 2.0 mm 3.0 mm Figure 15: Securing Wall Mounting Screws Note!   Make sure the screws dimensions are suitable for use with the wall mounting plate. Do not completely tighten the screws into the wall. A final adjustment may be needed before fully securing the wall mounting plates on the wall. 11. Align the wall mount plate over the screws on the wall. 12. Install the wall mount plate on the screws and slide it forward to lock in place, see the following figure. Figure 16: Wall Mount Installation 13. Once the device is installed on the wall, tighten the screws to secure the device. 16 SE400 SERIES Installing and Removing SFP Modules Up to two fiber optic ports are available (dependent on model) for use in the switch. Refer to the technical specifications for details. The Gigabit Ethernet ports on the switch are 100Base SFP Fiber ports, which require using the 100M or 1G mini-GBIC fiber transceivers to work properly. Advantech provides completed transceiver models for different distance requirement. The concept behind the LC port and cable is quite straight forward. Suppose that you are connecting devices I and II; contrary to electrical signals, optical signals do not require a circuit in order to transmit data. Consequently, one of the optical lines is used to transmit data from device I to device II, and the other optical line is used transmit data from device II to device I, for full-duplex transmission. Remember to connect the Tx (transmit) port of device I to the Rx (receive) port of device II, and the Rx (receive) port of device I to the Tx (transmit) port of device II. If you make your own cable, we suggest labeling the two sides of the same line with the same letter (A-to-A and Bto-B, as shown below, or A1-to-A2 and B1-to-B2). Note! This is a Class 1 Laser/LED product. To avoid causing serious damage to your eyes, do not stare directly into the Laser Beam. Installing SFP Modules To connect the fiber transceiver and LC cable, use the following guidelines: 1. Remove the dust plug from the fiber optic slot chosen for the SFP transceiver. Figure 17: Removing the Dust Plug from an SFP Slot Note! Do not remove the dust plug from the SFP slot if you are not installing the transceiver at this time. The dust plug protects hardware from dust contamination. 17 SE400 SERIES 2. 3. 4. 5. Position the SFP transceiver with the handle on top, see the following figure. Locate the triangular marking in the slot and align it with the bottom of the transceiver. Insert the SFP transceiver into the slot until it clicks into place. Make sure the module is seated correctly before sliding the module into the slot. A click sounds when it is locked in place. Handle Figure 18: Installing an SFP Transceiver Note! 6. Remove the protective plug from the SFP transceiver. Note! 7. If you are attaching fiber optic cables to the transceiver, continue with the following step. Otherwise, repeat the previous steps to install the remaining SFP transceivers in the device. Do not remove the dust plug from the transceiver if you are not installing the fiber optic cable at this time. The dust plug protects hardware from dust contamination. Insert the fiber cable into the transceiver. The connector snaps into place and locks. Figure 19: Attaching a Fiber Optic Cable to a Transceiver 8. Repeat the previous procedures to install any additional SFP transceivers in the switch. The fiber port is now set up. 18 SE400 SERIES Removing SFP Modules To disconnect an LC connector, use the following guidelines: 1. Press down and hold the locking clips on the upper side of the optic cable. 2. Pull the optic cable out to release it from the transceiver. Figure 20: Removing a Fiber Optic Cable to a Transceiver 3. Hold the handle on the transceiver and pull the transceiver out of the slot. Handle Figure 21: Removing an SFP Transceiver Note! Replace the dust plug on the slot if you are not installing a transceiver. The dust plug protects hardware from dust contamination. 19 SE400 SERIES Connecting the Switch to Ethernet Ports RJ45 Ethernet Cable Wiring For RJ45 connectors, data-quality, twisted pair cabling (rated CAT5 or better) is recommended. The connector bodies on the RJ45 Ethernet ports are metallic and connected to the GND terminal. For best performance, use shielded cabling. Shielded cabling may be used to provide further protection. Table 15: Pin Definition Straight-thru Cable Wiring Cross-over Cable Wiring Pin 1 Pin 1 Pin 1 Pin 3 Pin 2 Pin 2 Pin 2 Pin 6 Pin 3 Pin 3 Pin 3 Pin 1 Pin 6 Pin 6 Pin 6 Pin 2 1 8 Figure 22: Ethernet Plug & Connector Pin Position Maximum cable length: 100 meters (328 ft.) for 10/100BaseT. Power Supply Installation Overview Warning! Power down and disconnect the power cord before servicing or wiring the switch. Caution! Do not disconnect modules or cabling unless the power is first switched off. The device only supports the voltage outlined in the type plate. Do not use any other power components except those specifically designated for the switch device. Caution! Disconnect the power cord before installation or cable wiring. 20 SE400 SERIES The switches can be powered by using the same DC source used to power other devices. A DC voltage range of 12 to 48 VDC must be applied between the V1+ terminal and the V1- terminal (PW1), see the following illustrations. A Class 2 power supply is required to maintain a UL60950 panel listing. The chassis ground screw terminal should be tied to the panel or chassis ground. A redundant power configuration is supported through a secondary power supply unit to reduce network down time as a result of power loss. SE400 Series support 12 and 48 VDC. Dual power inputs are supported and allow you to connect a backup power source. Single DC Power Redundant DC Power P2 P1 P2 P1 Chassis GND (pane) Chassis GND (pane) Dual DC Supplies One DC Supply Figure 23: Power Wiring for SE400 Series Considerations Take into consideration the following guidelines before wiring the device:  The Terminal Block (CN1) is suitable for 12-24 AWG (3.31 - 0.205 mm2). Torque value 7 lb-in.   The cross sectional area of the earthing conductors shall be at least 3.31 mm2. Calculate the maximum possible current for each power and common wire. Make sure the power draw is within limits of local electrical code regulations. For best practices, route wiring for power and devices on separate paths. Do not bundle together wiring with similar electrical characteristics. Make sure to separate input and output wiring. Label all wiring and cabling to the various devices for more effective management and servicing.     Note! Routing communications and power wiring through the same conduit may cause signal interference. To avoid interference and signal degradation, route power and communications wires through separate conduits. 21 SE400 SERIES Grounding the Device Caution! Do not disconnect modules or cabling unless the power is first switched off. The device only supports the voltage outlined in the type plate. Do not use any other power components except those specifically designated for the switch device. Caution! Before connecting the device properly ground the device. Lack of a proper grounding set up may result in a safety risk and could be hazardous. Caution! Do not service equipment or cables during periods of lightning activity. Caution! Do not service any components unless qualified and authorized to do so. Caution! Do not block air ventilation holes. Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) affects the transmission performance of a device. By properly grounding the device to earth ground through a drain wire, you can set up the best possible noise immunity and emissions. Connection to Grounding Point Drain Wire with Lug Figure 24: Grounding Connection 22 SE400 SERIES By connecting the ground terminal by drain wire to earth ground the switch and chassis can be ground. Note! Before applying power to the grounded switch, it is advisable to use a volt meter to ensure there is no voltage difference between the power supply’s negative output terminal and the grounding point on the switch. Wiring a Relay Contact The following section details the wiring of the relay output. The terminal block on the series is wired and then installed onto the terminal receptor located on the series. DC 12-48V PWR2 1A@24V V2- V2+ P-Fail PWR1 V1- V1+ Figure 25: Terminal Receptor: Relay Contact The terminal receptor includes a total of six pins: two for PWR1, two for PWR2 and two for a fault circuit. Wiring the Power Inputs Caution! Do not disconnect modules or cabling unless the power is first switched off. The device only supports the voltage outlined in the type plate. Do not use any other power components except those specifically designated for the switch device. Warning! Power down and disconnect the power cord before servicing or wiring the switch. There are two power inputs for normal and redundant power configurations. The power input 2 is used for wiring a redundant power configuration. See the following for terminal block connector views. DC 12-48V PWR2 1A@24V V2- V2+ P-Fail PWR1 V1- V1+ Figure 26: Terminal Receptor: Power Input Contacts 23 SE400 SERIES To wire the power inputs: Make sure the power is not connected to the switch or the power converter before proceeding. 1. Loosen the screws securing terminal block to the terminal block receptor. 2. Remove the terminal block from the switch. Figure 27: Removing a Terminal Block 3. 4. Insert a small flat-bladed screwdriver in the V1+/V1- wire-clamp screws, and loosen the screws. Insert the negative/positive DC wires into the V+/V- terminals of PW1. If setting up power redundancy, connect PW2 in the same manner. Loosening Wire-clamp Screws Installing DC Wires Figure 28: Installing DC Wires in a Terminal Block 5. Tighten the wire-clamp screws to secure the DC wires in place. Securing Wire-clamp Screws Figure 29: Installing DC Wires in a Terminal Block 24 SE400 SERIES 6. 7. 8. Align the terminal block over the terminal block receptor on the switch. Insert the terminal block and press it in until it is flush with the terminal block receptor. Tighten the screws on the terminal block to secure it to the terminal block receptor. Figure 30: Securing a Terminal Block to a Receptor If there is no gap between the terminal block and the terminal receptor, the terminal block is seated correctly. 25 SE400 SERIES MANAGING SWITCH First Time set up Overview The Industrial Ethernet Managed Switch is a configurable device that facilitates the interconnection of Ethernet devices on an Ethernet network. This includes computers, operator interfaces, I/O, controllers, RTUs, PLCs, other switches/hubs or any device that supports the standard IEEE 802.3 protocol. This switch has all the capabilities of a store and forward Ethernet switch plus advanced management features such as SNMP, RSTP and port mirroring. This manual details how to configure the various management parameters in this easy to use switch. SCADA Requirements To take full advantage of all the features and resources available from the switch, it must be configured for your network. The switch implements Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP) and Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) to provide most of the services offered by the switch. Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol allows managed switches to communicate with each other to ensure that there exists only one active route between each pair of network nodes and provides automatic failover to the next available redundant route. A brief explanation of how RSTP works is given in the Spanning Tree section. The switch is capable of communicating with other SNMP capable devices on the network to exchange management information. This statistical/derived information from the network is saved in the Management Information Base (MIB) of the switch. The MIB is divided into several different information storage groups. These groups will be elaborated in detail in the Management and SNMP information section of this document. The switch implements Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) to optimize the flow of multicast traffic on your network. The switch supports both port-based and tag-based Virtual LANs for flexible integration with VLAN-aware networks with support for VLAN-unaware devices. Administrative Interface Access There are several administrative interfaces to the switch: 1. A graphical web interface accessible via the switch's built-in web server, supporting HTTP. Note! 2. This is the recommended method for managing the switch. An SNMP interface can be used to read/write many settings. 26 SE400 SERIES Using the Graphical (Web) Interface The graphical interface is provided via a web server in the switch and can be accessed via a web browser such as Opera, Mozilla, or Internet Explorer. Note! JavaScript must be supported and enabled in your browser for the graphical interface to work correctly. HTTP is supported for access to the web server. By default, both protocols are enabled. Either or both may be disabled to secure the switch. (See “HTTP” on page 72 in this section.) To access the graphical interface, enter a URL like HTTP://192.168.1.1 in your browser's address bar. Replace “http” with “https” to use secure http and replace “192.168.1.1” with your switch's IP address if you've changed it from the factory default. Note! This manual describes and depicts the web user interface in detail. The terminal interface is not specifically shown but is basically the same. Configuring the Switch for Network Access To control and monitor the switch via the network, it must be configured with basic network settings, including an IP address and subnet mask. Refer to the quick start guide in Section 1 for how to access your switch initially. To configure the switch for network access, select System to reach the System Settings menu. The settings in this menu control the switch's general network configuration.  DHCP Enabled/Disabled: The switch can automatically obtain an IP address from a server using the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP). This can speed up initial set up, as the network administrator does not have to find an open IP address.  IP Address and subnet mask configuration: The IP address for the switch can be changed to a user-defined address along with a customized subnet mask to separate subnets.  NTP Server: The IP address or domain name of an NTP (Network Time Protocol) server from which the switch may retrieve the current time at startup. Please note that using a domain name requires that at least one domain name server be configured. Configuring the Ethernet Ports The switch comes with default port settings that should allow you to connect to the Ethernet Ports without any additional configuration. Should there be a need to change the name of the ports, negotiation settings or flow control settings, you can do this in the Port Configuration menu. Access this menu by navigating to L2 Switching > Port Configuration.  Port Name: Each port in the managed switch can be identified with a custom name. Specify a name for each port here.  Admin: Ports can be enabled or disabled in the managed switch. For ports that are disabled, they are virtually non-existent (not visible in terms of switch operation or spanning tree algorithm). Choose to enable or disable a port by selecting Enabled or Disabled, respectively. 27 SE400 SERIES  Negotiation: All copper ports and gigabit fiber ports in the managed switch are capable of auto-negotiation such that the fastest bandwidth is selected. Choose to enable autonegotiation or use fixed settings. 100Mbps Fiber ports are Fixed speed only.  Speed/Duplex/Flow Control: The managed switch accepts three local area network Ethernet Standards. The first standard, 10BASE-T, runs 10Mbps with twisted pair Ethernet cable between network interfaces. The second local area network standard is 100BASE-T, which runs at 100Mbps over the same twisted pair Ethernet cable. Lastly, there is 100BASE-F, which enables fast Ethernet (100Mbps) over fiber. These options are available:  10h–10 Mbps, Half Duplex  10f –10 Mbps, Full Duplex  100h–100 Mbps, Half Duplex  100f –100 Mbps, Full Duplex On managed switches with gigabit combination ports, those ports with have two rows, a standard row of check boxes and a row labeled “SFP” with radio buttons. The SFP setting independently sets the speed at which a transceiver will operate if one is plugged in. Otherwise, the switch will use the fixed Ethernet port and the corresponding settings for it. 28 SE400 SERIES Web Browser Configuration The switch has an HTML based user interface embedded in the flash memory. The interface offers an easy to use means to manage basic and advanced switch functions. The interface allows for local or remote switch configuration anywhere on the network. The interface supports the following:  Internet Explorer (6.0)  Chrome  Firefox Preparing for Web Configuration The interface requires the installation and connection of the switch to the existing network. A PC also connected to the network is required to connect to the switch and access the interface through a web browser. The required networking information is provided as follows:  IP address: 192.168.1.1  Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  Default gateway: 192.168.1.254  User name: admin  Password: admin Log In To access the login window, connect the device to the network, see “Connecting the Switch to Ethernet Ports” on page 20. Once the switch is installed and connected, power on the switch see the following procedures to log into your switch. When the switch is first installed, the default network configuration is set to DHCP enabled. You will need to make sure your network environment supports the switch set up before connecting it to the network. 1. Launch your web browser on a computer. 2. In the browser’s address bar type in the switch’s default IP address (192.168.1.1). The login screen displays. 3. Enter the default user name and password (admin/admin) to log into the management interface. You can change the default password after you have successfully logged in. 4. Click Login to enter the management interface. Figure 31: Login Screen 29 SE400 SERIES Recommended Practices One of the easiest things to do to help increase the security posture of the network infrastructure is to implement a policy and standard for secure management. This practice is an easy way to maintain a healthy and secure network. After you have performed the basic configurations on your switches, the following is a recommendation which is considered best practice policy. Changing Default Password In keeping with good management and security practices, it is recommended that you change the default password as soon as the device is functioning and set up correctly. The following details the necessary steps to change the default password. To change the password: 1. Navigate to Tools > User Account. 2. From the User drop-down menu, select the Admin (default) account. 3. In the User Name field, enter admin for this account. It is not necessary to change the user name, however, a change in the default settings increases the security settings. 4. In the Password field, type in the new password. Re-type the same password in the Retype Password field. 5. Click Apply to change the current account settings. Figure 32: Changing a Default Password After saving all the desired settings, perform a system save (Tools > Save Configuration). The changes are saved. 30 SE400 SERIES Monitoring Device Information The Device Information menu lists information, such as: System Name, System Location, MAC Address, Firmware version, and more, pertaining to the system. The information is for review only. To modify the device information, see the respective item within the user interface. To access this page, click Monitoring > Device Information. Figure 33: Monitoring > Device Information The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 16: Monitoring > Device Information Item Description System Name Click Switch to enter the system name: up to 128 alphanumeric characters (default is Switch). System Location Click Default to enter the location: up to 256 alphanumeric characters (default is Default). System Contact Click Default to enter the contact person: up to 128 alphanumeric characters (default is Default). MAC Address Displays the MAC address of the switch. IP Address Displays the assigned IP address of the switch. Subnet Mask Displays the assigned subnet mask of the switch. Gateway Displays the assigned gateway of the switch. Loader Version Displays the current loader version of the switch. Loader Date Displays the current loader build date of the switch. Firmware Version Displays the current firmware version of the switch. Firmware Date Displays the current firmware build date of the switch. 31 SE400 SERIES Table 16: Monitoring > Device Information (Continued) Item Description System Object ID Displays the base object ID of the switch. System Up Time Displays the time since the last switch reboot. Logging Message The Logging Message Filter page allows you to enable the display of logging message filter. To access this page, click Monitoring > Logging Message. Figure 34: Monitoring > Logging Message The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 17: Monitoring > Logging Message Item Description Target Click the drop-down menu to select a target to store the log messages.   Buffered: Store log messages in RAM. All log messages are cleared after system reboot. File: Store log messages in a file. Severity The setting allows you to designate a severity level for the Logging Message Filter function. Click the drop-down menu to select the severity level target setting. The level options are:  emerg: Indicates system is unusable. It is the highest level of severity.  alert: Indicates action must be taken immediately.  crit: Indicates critical conditions.  error: Indicates error conditions.  warning: Indicates warning conditions.  notice: Indicates normal but significant conditions.  info: Indicates informational messages.  debug: Indicates debug-level messages. Category Click the drop-down menu to select the category level target setting. View Click View to display all Logging Information and Logging Message information. Refresh Click Refresh to update the screen. Clear buffered messages Click Clear buffered messages to clear the logging buffer history list. The ensuing table for Logging Information table settings are informational only: Target, Severity and Category. The ensuing table for Logging Message table settings are informational only: No., Time Stamp, Category, Severity and Message. 32 SE400 SERIES Port Monitoring Port Network Monitor is a bandwidth and network monitoring tool for the purpose of capturing network traffic and measuring of network throughput. The monitoring functionality includes listing of port statistics as well as port utilization. Port Statistics To access this page, click Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Statistics. Figure 35: Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Statistics The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 18: Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Statistics Item Description Port Click the drop-down menu to select a port and its captured statistical setting values. Clear Click Clear to clear the counter selections. The ensuing table for IF MIB Counters settings are informational only: ifInOctets, ifInUcastPkts, ifInNUcastPkts, ifInDiscards, ifOutOctets, ifOutUcastPkts, ifOutNUcastPkts, ifOutDiscards, ifInMulticastPkts, ifInBroadcastPkts, ifOutMulticastPkts and ifOutBroadcastPkts. The ensuing table for Ether-Like MIB Counters settings are informational only: dot3StatsAlignmentErrors, dot3StatsFCSErrors, dot3StatsSingleCollisionFrames, dot3StatsMultipleCollisionFrames, dot3StatsDeferredTransmissions, dot3StatsLateCollisions, dot3StatsExcessiveCollisions, dot3StatsFrameTooLongs, dot3StatsSymbolErrors, dot3ControlInUnknownOpcodes, dot3InPauseFrames and dot3OutPauseFrames. Port Utilization To access this page, click Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Utilization. Figure 36: Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Utilization The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 19: Monitoring > Port Monitoring > Port Utilization Item Description Refresh period Click the drop-down menu to select and designate a period (second intervals) to refresh the information (TX and RX) listings. IFG Click the drop-down menu to enable or disable the Interframe Gap (IFG) statistic. 33 SE400 SERIES Link Aggregation The Link Aggregation function provides LAG information for each trunk. It displays membership status, link state and membership type for each port. To access this page, click Monitoring > Link Aggregation. The ensuing table for Link Aggregation Group Status settings are informational only: LAG, Name, Type, Link State, Active Member and Standby Member. The ensuing table for LACP Information settings are informational only: LAG, Port, PartnerSysId, PnKey, AtKey, Sel, Mux, Receiv, PrdTx, AtState and PnState. LLDP Statistics The LLDP Statistics page displays the LLDP statistics. To access this page, click Monitoring > LLDP Statistics. Figure 37: Monitoring > LLDP Statistics The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 20: Monitoring > LLDP Statistics Item Description Clear Click Clear to reset LLDP Statistics of all the interfaces. Refresh Click Refresh to update the data on the screen with the present state of the data in the switch. The ensuing table for LLDP Global Statistics settings are informational only: Insertions, Deletions, Drops and Age Outs. The ensuing table for LLDP Port Statistics settings are informational only: Port, TX Frames (Total), RX Frames (Total, Discarded and Errors), RX TLVs (Discarded and Unrecognized) and RX Ageouts (Total). 34 SE400 SERIES IGMP Statistics The IGMP Statistics function displays statistical package information for IP multicasting. To access this page, click Monitoring > IGMP Statistics. Figure 38: Monitoring > IGMP Statistics The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 21: Monitoring > IGMP Statistics Item Description Clear Click Clear to refresh IGMP Statistics of all the interfaces. Refresh Click Refresh to update the data on the screen with the present state of the data in the switch. The ensuing table for IGMP Statistics settings are informational only: Total RX, Valid RX, Invalid RX, Other RX, Leave RX, Report RX, General Query RX, Special Group Query RX, Special Group & Source Query RX, Leave TX, Report TX, General Query TX, Special Group Query TX and Special Group & Source Query TX. 35 SE400 SERIES System IP Settings The IP Settings menu allows you to select a static or DHCP network configuration. The Static displays the configurable settings for the static option. To access this page, click System > IP Settings. Figure 39: System > IP Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 22: System > IP Settings Item Description Mode Click the radio button to select the IP Address Setting mode: Static, DHCP, or BOOTP. IP Address Enter a value to specify the IP address of the interface. The default is 192.168.1.1. Subnet Mask Enter a value to specify the IP subnet mask for the interface. The default is 255.255.255.0. Gateway Enter a value to specify the default gateway for the interface. The default is 192.168.1.254. DNS Server 1 Enter a value to specify the DNS server 1 for the interface. The default is 168.95.1.1. DNS Server 2 Enter a value to specify the DNS server 2 for the interface. The default is 168.95.192.1. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for IP Address Information settings are informational only: DHCP State, BOOTP State, Static IP Address, Static Subnet Mask, Static Gateway, Static DNS Server 1 and Static DNS Server 2. 36 SE400 SERIES DHCP Client Option 82 The DHCP Client Option 82 configurable Circuit ID and Remote ID feature enhances validation security by allowing you to select naming choices suboptions. You can select a switchconfigured hostname or specify an ASCII test string for the remote ID. You can also configure an ASCII text string to override the circuit ID. To access this page, click System > DHCP Client Option 82. Figure 40: System > DHCP Client Option 82 The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 23: System > DHCP Client Option 82 Item Description Mode Click the radio button to enable or disable the DHCP Client Option 82 mode. Circuit ID Format Click the drop-down menu to set the ID format: String, Hex, User Definition. Circuit ID String Enter the string ID of the corresponding class. Circuit ID Hex Enter the hex string of the corresponding class. Circuit ID User-Define Enter the user definition of the corresponding class. Remote ID Format Click the drop-down menu to set the Remote ID format: String, Hex, User Definition. Remote ID String Enter the remote string ID of the corresponding class. Remote ID Hex Enter the remote hex string of the corresponding class. Remote ID User-Define Enter the remote user definition of the corresponding class. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for DHCP Client Option 82 Information table settings are informational only: Status, Circuit ID Format, Circuit ID String, Circuit ID Hex, Circuit ID User-Define, Remote ID Format, Remote ID String, Remote ID Hex and Remote ID User-Define. 37 SE400 SERIES DHCP Auto Provision The DHCP Auto Provision feature allows you to load configurations using a server with DHCP options. Through the remote connection, the switch obtains information from a configuration file available through the TFTP server. To access this page, click System > DHCP Auto Provision. Figure 41: System > DHCP Auto Provision The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 24: System > DHCP Auto Provision Item Description Status Select the radio button to enable or disable the DHCP Auto Provisioning Setting. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for DHCP Auto Provision Information settings are informational only: Status. IPv6 Settings To access this page, click System > IPv6 Settings. Figure 42: System > IPv6 Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 25: System > IPv6 Settings Item Description Auto Configuration Select the radio button to enable or disable the IPv6. IPv6 Address Enter the IPv6 address for the system. Gateway Enter the gateway address for the system. DHCPv6 Client Enter the DHCPv6 address for the system. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 38 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for IPv6 Information settings are informational only: Auto Configuration, IPv6 In Use Address, IPv6 In Use Router, IPv6 Static Address, IPv6 Static Router and DHCPv6 Client. Management VLAN By default the VLAN is the management VLAN providing communication with the switch management interface. To access this page, click System > Management VLAN. Figure 43: System > Management VLAN The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 26: System > Management VLAN Item Description Management VLAN Click the drop-down menu to select a defined VLAN. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Management VLAN State are informational only: Management VLAN. 39 SE400 SERIES System Time To access this page, click System > System Time. Figure 44: System > System Time The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 27: System > System Time Item Description Enable SNTP Click the radio button to enable or disable the SNTP. SNTP/NTP Server Address Enter the address of the SNTP server. This is a text string of up to 64 characters containing the encoded unicast IP address or hostname of a SNTP server. Unicast SNTP requests will be sent to this address. If this address is a DNS hostname, then that hostname should be resolved into an IP address each time a SNTP request is sent to it. SNTP Port Enter the port on the server to which SNTP requests are to be sent. Allowed range is 1 to 65535 (default: 123). Manual Time Click the drop-down menus to set local date and time of the system. Time Zone Click the drop-down menu to select a system time zone. 40 SE400 SERIES Table 27: System > System Time (Continued) Item Description Daylight Saving Time Click the drop-down menu to enable or disable the daylight saving time settings. Daylight Saving Time Offset Enter the offsetting variable in seconds to adjust for daylight saving time. Recurring From Click the drop-down menu to designate the start date and time for daylight saving time. Recurring To Click the drop-down menu to designate the end date and time for daylight saving time. Non-Recurring From Click the drop-down menu to designate a start date and time for a non-recurring daylight saving time event. Non-Recurring To Click the drop-down menu to designate the end date and time for a nonrecurring daylight saving time event. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for System Time Information settings are informational only: Current Date/Time, SNTP, SNTP Server Address, SNTP Server Port, Time zone, Daylight Saving Time, Daylight Saving Time Offset, From and To. L2 Switching Port Configuration Port Configuration describes how to use the user interface to configure LAN ports on the switch. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Port Configuration. Figure 45: L2 Switching > Port Configuration The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 28: L2 Switching > Port Configuration Item Description Port Click the drop-down menu to select the port for the L2 Switch setting. Enabled Click the radio-button to enable or disable the Port Setting function. Speed Click the drop-down menu to select the port speed: Auto, Auto-10M, Auto100M, Auto-10/100M, 10M or 100M. Duplex Click the drop-down menu to select the duplex setting: Half or Full. 41 SE400 SERIES Table 28: L2 Switching > Port Configuration (Continued) Item Description Flow Control Click the radio button to enable or disable the flow control function. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Port Status settings are informational only: Port, Edit (click to enter description), Enable State, Link Status, Speed, Duplex, FlowCtrl Config and FlowCtrl Status. Port Mirror Port mirroring function allows the sending of a copy of network packets seen on one switch port to a network monitoring connection on another switch port. Port mirroring can be used to analyze and debug data or diagnose errors on a network or to mirror either inbound or outbound traffic (or both). There are no preset values in the Port Mirror. The displayed values do not represent the actual setting values. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Port Mirror. Figure 46: L2 Switching > Port Mirror The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 29: L2 Switching > Port Mirror Item Description Session ID Click the drop-down menu to select a port mirroring session from the list. The number of sessions allowed is platform specific. Monitor session state Click the drop-down menu to enable or disable the session mode for a selected session ID. Destination Port Click the drop-down menu to select the destination port and receive all the traffic from configured mirrored port(s). Allow-ingress Click the drop-down menu to enable or disable the Allow-ingress function. Sniffer RX Ports Enter the variable to define the RX port. Sniffer TX Ports Enter the variable to define the TX port. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Mirror Status settings are informational only: Session ID, Destination Port, Ingress State, Source TX Port and Source RX Port. 42 SE400 SERIES Link Aggregation Link Aggregation is a method for combining multiple network connections in parallel in order to increase throughput beyond the capability of a single connection, and to provide redundancy in case one of the links should fail. Load Balance The Load Balancing page allows you to select between a MAC Address or IP/MAC Address algorithm for the even distribution of IP traffic across two or more links. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > Load Balance. Figure 47: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > Load Balance The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 30: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > Load Balance Item Description Load Balance Algorithm Select the radio button to select the Load Balance Setting: MAC Address or IP/MAC Address. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Load Balance Information settings are informational only: Load Balance Algorithm. LAG Management Link aggregation is also known as trunking. It is a feature available on the Ethernet gateway and is used with Layer 2 Bridging. Link aggregation allows for the logical merging of multiple ports into a single link. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Management. Figure 48: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Management The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 31: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Management Item Description LAG Click the drop-down menu to select the designated trunk group: Trunk 1~8. Name Enter an entry to specify the LAG name. 43 SE400 SERIES Table 31: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Management Item Description Type Click the radio button to specify the type mode: Static or LACP. Ports Click the drop-down menu to select designated ports: Port1-10. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for LAG Management Information settings are informational only: LAG, Name, Type, Link State, Active Member, Standby Member, Edit (click to modify the settings) and Clear (click to load default settings). LAG Port Settings The LAG Port Settings page allows you to enable or disable, set LAG status, speed and flow control functions. In this example we will configure a LAG between the following switches: To access this page, click L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Port Settings. Figure 49: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 32: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LAG Port Settings Item Description LAG Select Click the drop-down menu to select a predefined LAG trunk definition: LAG 1-8. Enabled Click the radio button to enable or disable the LAG Port. Speed Click the drop-down menu to select the port speed: Auto, Auto-10M, Auto100M, Auto-10/100M, 10M or 100M. Flow Control Click the radio button to enable or disable the Flow Control for the LAG Port. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for LAG Port Status settings are informational only: LAG, Description, Port Type, Enable State, Link Status, Speed, Duplex, FlowCtrl Config and FlowCtrl Status. 44 SE400 SERIES LACP Priority Settings The LACP Priority Settings page allows you to configure the system priority for LACP. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Priority Settings. Figure 50: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Priority Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 33: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Priority Settings Item Description System Priority Enter the value (1-65535) to designate the LACP system priority. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for LACP Information settings are informational only: System Priority. LACP Port Settings Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) provides a method to control the bundling of several physical ports together to form a single logical channel. By configuring the LACP function, the switch can negotiate an automatic bundling of links by sending LACP packets to the peer device (also implementing LACP). To access this page, click L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Port Settings. Figure 51: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 34: L2 Switching > Link Aggregation > LACP Port Settings Item Description Port Select Select a port for the LACP Port Settings. The listed available settings are: Port1-10. However, the available settings are dependent on the connected LACP device and may not be listed as displayed in the current figure. Priority Enter a variable (1 to 65535) to assign a priority to the defined port selection. Timeout Click the radio button to select a long or short timeout period. Mode Click the radio button to select the setting mode: Active or Passive.  Active: Enables LACP unconditionally.  Passive: Enables LACP only when an LACP device is detected (default state). Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 45 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for LACP Port Information settings are informational only: Port Name, Priority, Timeout and Mode. 802.1Q VLAN The 802.1Q VLAN feature allows for a single VLAN to support multiple VLANs. With the 802.1Q feature you can preserve VLAN IDs and segregate different VLAN traffic. The 802.1Q VLAN tag feature encapsulates the 802.1Q VLAN tagging within another 802.1Q VLAN tag. The outer tag is assigned following the AP group, while the inner VLAN ID is assigned dynamically by the AAA server. VLAN Management The management of VLANs is available through the VLAN Settings page. Through this page you can add or delete VLAN listings and add a prefix name to an added entry. To access this page, click L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > VLAN Management. Figure 52: L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > VLAN Management The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 35: L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > VLAN Management Item Description VLAN list Enter the name of the VLAN entry to set up. VLAN Action Click the radio button to add or delete the VLAN entry shown in the previous field. VLAN Name Prefix Enter the prefix to be used by the VLAN list entry in the previous field. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for VLAN Table settings are informational only: VLAN ID, VLAN Name, VLAN Type and Edit (click to enter VLAN name). 46 SE400 SERIES PVID Settings The PVID Settings page allows you to designate a PVID for a selected port, define the accepted type and enable/disable the ingress filtering. To access this page, click L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > PVID Settings. Figure 53: L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > PVID Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 36: L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > PVID Settings Item Description Port Select Click the drop-down menu to select a port and edit its settings: Port1-10, or Trunk1 - Trunk8. PVID Enter the VLAN ID you want assigned to untagged or priority tagged frames received on this port. The value ranges 1 to 4094. The default is 1. Accepted Type Click the radio button to specify which frames to forward. Tag Only discards any untagged or priority tagged frames. Untag Only discards any tagged frames. All accepts all untagged and tagged frames. Whichever you select, VLAN tagged frames are forwarded in accordance with the IEEE 802.1Q VLAN standard. The default is All. Ingress Filtering Click the radio button to specify how you want the port to handle tagged frames. If you enable Ingress Filtering, a tagged frame will be discarded if this port is not a member of the VLAN identified by the VLAN ID in the tag. If you select Disabled, all tagged frames will be accepted. The default is Disabled. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Port VLAN Status settings are informational only: Port, Interface VLAN Mode, PVID, Accept Frame Type and Ingress Filtering. 47 SE400 SERIES Port to VLAN The Port to VLAN page allows you to add a port to a VLAN and select the related parameters. To access this page, click L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > Port to VLAN. Figure 54: L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > Port to VLAN The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 37: L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > Port to VLAN Item Description Port Displays the assigned port to the entry. Interface VLAN Mode Displays the assigned mode to the listed VLAN port.  Hybrid: Port hybrid model.  Access: Port hybrid model.  Trunk: Port hybrid model.  Tunnel: Port hybrid model. Membership Displays the assigned membership status of the port entry, options include: Forbidden, Excluded Tagged or Untagged. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 48 SE400 SERIES Port-VLAN Mapping To access this page, click L2 Switching > 802.1Q VLAN > Port-VLAN Mapping. The ensuing table for Port-VLAN Mapping Table settings are informational only: Port, Mode, Administrative VLANs and Operational VLANs. GARP The Generic Attribute Registration Protocol (GARP) is a local area network (LAN) protocol. The protocol defines procedures for the registration and de-registration of attributes (network identifiers or addresses) by end stations and switches with each other. GARP Settings To access this page, click L2 Switching > GARP > GARP Settings. Figure 55: L2 Switching > GARP > GARP Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 38: L2 Switching > GARP > GARP Settings Item Description Join Time Enter a value to specify the time between the transmission of GARP PDUs registering (or re-registering) membership for a VLAN or multicast group in centiseconds. Enter a number between 6 and 600. An instance of this timer exists for each GARP participant for each port. Leave Time Enter a value to specify the time to wait after receiving an unregister request for a VLAN or multicast group before deleting the associated entry, in centiseconds. This allows time for another station to assert registration for the same attribute in order to maintain uninterrupted service. Enter a number between 12 and 3000. An instance of this timer exists for each GARP participant for each port. Leave All Time Enter a value to specify the Leave All Time controls how frequently Leave All PDUs are generated. A LeaveAll PDU indicates that all registrations will shortly be deregistered. Participants will need to rejoin in order to maintain registration. The Leave All Period Timer is set to a random value in the range of LeaveAllTime to 1.5*LeaveAllTime. The timer is specified in centiseconds. Enter a number between 12 and 12000. An instance of this timer exists for each GARP participant for each port. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for GARP Information settings are informational only: Join Time, Leave Time and Leave All Time. 49 SE400 SERIES GVRP Settings The GVRP Settings page allows you to enable or disable the GVRP (GARP VLAN Registration Protocol or Generic VLAN Registration Protocol) protocol which facilitates control of virtual local area networks (VLANs) within a larger network. To access this page, click L2 Switching > GARP > GVRP Settings. Figure 56: L2 Switching > GARP > GVRP Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 39: L2 Switching > GARP > GVRP Settings Item Description Status Click to enable or disable the GARP VLAN Registration Protocol administrative mode for the switch. The factory default is Disable. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for GVRP Information settings are informational only: GVRP. 802.3az EEE The 802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) innovative green feature reduces energy consumption through intelligent functionality:  Traffic detection — Energy Efficient Ethernet (EEE) compliance  Inactive link detection Inactive link detection function automatically reduces power usage when inactive links or devices are detected. To access this page, click L2 Switching > 802.3az EEE. Figure 57: L2 Switching > 802.3az EEE The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 40: L2 Switching > 802.3az EEE Item Description Port Select Enter the port to set up the EEE function. State Click Enabled or Disabled to set the state mode of the port select setting. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for EEE Enable Status settings are informational only: Port and EEE State. 50 SE400 SERIES Multicast SCADA Requirements Multicast forwarding allows a single packet to be forwarded to multiple destinations. The service is based on L2 switch receiving a single packet addressed to a specific Multicast address. Multicast forwarding creates copies of the packet, and transmits the packets to the relevant ports. Multicast Filtering The Multicast Filtering page allows for the definition of action settings when an unknown multicast request is received. The options include: Drop, Flood, or Router Port. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > Multicast Filtering. Figure 58: L2 Switching > Multicast > Multicast Filtering The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 41: L2 Switching > Multicast > Multicast Filtering Item Description Unknown Multicast Action Select the configuration protocol: Drop, Flood, or Router Port, to apply for any unknown multicast event. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Properties Information settings are informational only: Unknown Multicast Action. 51 SE400 SERIES IGMP Snooping IGMP Snooping is defined as the process of listening to Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) network traffic. IGMP Snooping allows a network switch to listen in on the IGMP conversation between hosts and routers and maintain a map of which links need which IP multicast streams. Multicasts can be filtered from the links which do not need them in turn controlling which ports receive specific multicast traffic. IGMP Settings To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Settings. Figure 59: L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 42: L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Settings Item Description IGMP Snooping State Select Enable or Disable to designate the IGMP Snooping State. IGMP Snooping Version Select designate the IGMP Snooping Version: V2 or V3. IGMP Snooping Report Suppression Select Enable or Disable to set up the report suppression for IGMP Snooping. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for IGMP Snooping Information settings are informational only: IGMP Snooping State, IGMP Snooping Version and IGMP Snooping V2 Report Suppression. The ensuing table for IGMP Snooping Table settings are informational only: Entry No., VLAN ID, IGMP Snooping Operation State, Router Ports Auto Learn, Query Robustness, Query Interval (sec.), Query Max Response Interval (sec.), Last Member Query count, Last Member Query Interval (sec), Immediate Leave and Edit (click to modify the settings). IGMP Querier IGMP Querier allows snooping to function by creating the tables for snooping. General queries must be unconditionally forwarded by all switches involved in IGMP snooping. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Querier. Figure 60: L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Querier 52 SE400 SERIES The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 43: L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Querier Item Description VLAN ID Select the VLAN ID to define the local IGMP querier. Querier State Select Disable or Enable to configure the VLAN ID (IGMP Querier). Querier Version Select the querier version (V2 or V3) designated to the selected VLAN ID. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for IGMP Querier Status settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Querier State, Querier Status, Querier Version and Querier IP. IGMP Static Groups To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Static Groups. Figure 61: L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Static Groups The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 44: L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > IGMP Static Groups Item Description VLAN ID Select the VLAN ID to define IGMP static group. Group IP Address Enter the IP address assigned to the VLAN ID. Member Ports Enter the port numbers to associate with the static group. Add Click Add to add an IGMP group. The ensuing table for IGMP Static Groups Status settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Group IP Address, Member Ports and Modify. Multicast Groups To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > Multicast Groups. The ensuing table for Multicast Groups settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Group IP Address, Member Ports, Type and Life (Sec). Router Ports To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > IGMP Snooping > Router Ports. The ensuing table for Router Ports settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Port and Expiry Time (Sec). 53 SE400 SERIES MLD Snooping The MLD Snooping page allows you to select the snooping status (enable or disable), the version (v1 or v2) and the enabling/disabling of the report suppression for the MLD querier, which sends out periodic general MLD queries and are forwarded through all ports in the VLAN. MLD Settings To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Settings. Figure 62: L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 45: L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Settings Item Description MLD Snooping State Select Enable or Disable to set up the MLD Snooping State. MLD Snooping Version Select the querier version (V1 or V2) designated to the MLD Snooping Version. MLD Snooping Report Suppression Select Enable or Disable to designate the status of the report suppression. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for MLD Snooping Information settings are informational only: MLD Snooping State, MLD Snooping Version and MLD Snooping V2 Report Suppression. The ensuing table for MLD Snooping Table settings are informational only: Entry No., VLAN ID, MLD Snooping Operation State, Router Ports Auto Learn, Query Robustness, Query Interval (sec.), Query Max Response Interval (sec.), Last Member Query count, Last Member Query Interval (sec), Immediate Leave and Edit (click to modify the settings). 54 SE400 SERIES MLD Querier The MLD Querier page allows you to select and enable/disable the MLD querier and define the version (IGMPv1 or IGMPv2) when enabled. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Querier. Figure 63: L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Querier The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 46: L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Querier Item Description VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID to configure. Querier State Select Enable or Disable status on the selected VLAN.  Enable: Enable IGMP Querier Election.  Disable: Disable IGMP Querier Election. Querier Version Select the querier version (IGMPV1 or IGMPV2) designated to the MLD Querier function. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for MLD Querier Status settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Querier State, Querier Status, Querier Version and Querier IP. MLD Static Group The MLD Static Group page allows you to configure specified ports as static member ports. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Static Group. Figure 64: L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Static Group The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 47: L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > MLD Static Group Item Description VLAN ID Enter the VLAN ID to define the local MLD Static Group. Group IP Address Enter the IP address associated with the static group. Member Ports Enter the ports designated with the static group. Add Click Add to add a MLD static group. 55 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for MLD Static Groups Status settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Group IP Address, Member Ports and Modify. Multicast Groups To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > Multicast Groups. The ensuing table for Multicast Groups settings are informational only: ID, Group IP Address, Member Ports, Type and Life (Sec). Router Ports To access this page, click L2 Switching > Multicast > MLD Snooping > Router Ports. The ensuing table for Router Ports settings are informational only: VLAN ID, Port and Expiry Time (Sec). Jumbo Frame Jumbo frames are frames larger than the standard Ethernet frame size of 1518 bytes. The Jumbo Frame function allows the configuration of Ethernet frame size. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Jumbo Frame. Figure 65: L2 Switching > Jumbo Frame The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 48: L2 Switching > Jumbo Frame Item Description Jumbo Frame (Bytes) Enter the variable in bytes (1518 to 9216) to define the jumbo frame size. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Jumbo Frame Config settings are informational only: Jumbo Frame (Bytes). 56 SE400 SERIES Spanning Tree The Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) is a network protocol to ensure loop-free topology for any bridged Ethernet local area network. STP Global Settings The STP Global Settings page allows you to set the STP status, select the configuration for a BPDU packet, choose the path overhead, force version and set the configuration revision range. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Global Settings. Figure 66: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Global Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 49: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Global Settings Item Description Enabled Click the radio-button to enable or disable the STP status. BPDU Forward Select flooding or filtering to designate the type of BPDU packet. PathCost Method Select short or long to define the method of used for path cost calculations. Force Version Click the drop-down menu to select the operating mode for STP.  STP-Compatible: 802.1D STP operation.  RSTP-Operation: 802.1w operation. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for STP Information settings are informational only: STP, BPDU Forward, PathCost Method and Force Version. 57 SE400 SERIES STP Port Settings The STP Port Settings page allows you to configure the ports for the setting, port’s contribution, configure edge port, and set the status of the BPDU filter. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Settings. Figure 67: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 50: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Settings Item Description Port Select Select the port list to specify the ports that apply to this setting. Admin Enable Select Enabled or Disabled to set up the admin profile for the STP port. Path Cost (0 = Auto) Set the port’s cost contribution. For a root port, the root path cost for the bridge. (0 means Auto). Edge Port Click the drop-down menu to set the edge port configuration.  No: Force to false state (as link to a bridge).  Yes: Force to true state (as link to a host). P2P MAC Click the drop-down menu to set the Point-to-Point port configuration.  No: Force to false state.  Yes: Force to true state. Migrate Click the check box to enable the migrate function. Forces the port to use the new MST/RST BPDUs, requiring the switch to test on the LAN segment. for the presence of legacy devices, which are not able to understand the new BPDU formats. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for STP Port Status settings are informational only: Port, Admin Enable, Path Cost, Edge Port and P2P MAC. 58 SE400 SERIES STP Bridge Settings The STP Bridge Settings page allows you to configure the priority, forward delay, maximum age, Tx hold count, and the hello time for the bridge. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Bridge Settings. Figure 68: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Bridge Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 51: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Bridge Settings Item Description Priority Click the drop-down menu to select the STP bridge priority. Forward Delay Enter the variable (4 to 30) to set the forward delay for STP bridge settings. Max Age Enter the variable (6 to 40) to set the Max age for STP bridge settings. Tx Hold Count Enter the variable (1 to 10) to designate the TX hold count for STP bridge settings. Hello Time Enter the variable (1 to 10) to designate the Hello Time for STP bridge settings. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for STP Bridge Information settings are informational only: Priority, Forward Delay, Max Age, Tx Hold Count and Hello Time. The ensuing table for STP Bridge Status settings are informational only: Bridge Identifier, Designated Root Bridge, Root Path Cost, Designated Bridge, Root Port and Last Topology Change. 59 SE400 SERIES STP Port Advanced Settings The STP Port Advanced Settings page allows you to select the port list to apply this setting. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Advanced Settings. Figure 69: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Advanced Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 52: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Port Advanced Settings Item Description Port Select Select the port to designate the STP settings. Priority Click the drop-down menu to designate a priority. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for STP Port Status settings are informational only: Port, Identifier (Priority / Port Id), Path Cost Conf/Oper, Designated Root Bridge, Root Path Cost, Designated Bridge, Edge Port Conf/Oper, P2P MAC Conf/Oper, Port Role and Port State. MST Config Identification The MST Config Identification page allows you to configure the identification setting name and the identification range. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Config Identification. Figure 70: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Config Identification The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 53: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Config Identification Item Description Configuration Name Enter the identifier used to identify the configuration currently being used. It may be up to 32 characters. Revision Level Enter the identifier for the Revision Configuration, range: 0 to 65535 (default: 0). Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for MST Configuration Identification Information settings are informational only: Configuration Name and Revision Level. 60 SE400 SERIES MST Instance ID Settings The MST Instance ID Settings page allows you to edit the MSTI ID and VID List settings. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance ID Settings. Figure 71: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance ID Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 54: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance ID Settings Item Description MSTI ID Enter the MST instance ID (0-15). VID List Enter the pre-configured VID list. Move Click Move to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for MST Instance ID Information settings are informational only: MSTI ID and VID List. MST Instance Priority Settings The MST Instance Priority Settings allows you to specify the MST instance and the bridge priority in that instance. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance Priority Settings. Figure 72: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance Priority Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 55: L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance Priority Settings Item Description MSTI ID Click the drop-down menu to specify the MST instance. Priority Click the drop-down menu set the bridge priority in the specified MST instance Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for MST Instance Priority Information settings are informational only: MSTI ID, Priority and Action. 61 SE400 SERIES MST Instance Info To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > MST Instance Info. The ensuing table for STP Bridge Status settings are informational only: Bridge Identifier, Designated Root Bridge, Root Path Cost, Designated Bridge, Root Port and TCNLast Topology Change. The ensuing table for STP Port Status settings are informational only: Port, Identifier (Priority / Port Id), Path Cost Conf/Oper, Designated Root Bridge, Root Path Cost, Designated Bridge, Edge Port Conf/Oper, P2P MAC Conf/Oper, Port Role and Port State. STP Statistics To access this page, click L2 Switching > Spanning Tree > STP Statistics. The ensuing table for STP Statistics settings are informational only: Port, Configuration BPDUs Received, TCN BPDUs Received, Configuration BPDUs Transmitted and TCN BPDUs Transmitted. X-Ring Elite The X-Ring Elite function provides an improvement over Spanning Tree and Rapid Spanning Tree and a rapid auto recovery in the event that the network suffers a corrupt or broken link and prevents network loops. X-Ring Elite Settings The X-Ring Elite Settings allows you to enable or disable the state of the X-Ring settings. To access this page, click L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Settings. Figure 73: L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 56: L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Settings Item Description State Select Enabled or Disabled to set up the X-Ring Elite mode. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Information settings are informational only: X-Ring Elite State. 62 SE400 SERIES X-Ring Elite Groups The X-Ring Elite Groups page allows you to select the function and role for each device and the connected ports. To access this page, click L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Groups. Figure 74: L2 Switching > X-Ring Elite > X-Ring Elite Groups The ensuing table for Information settings is informational only: Ring ID, Role, Port 1, Port 2 and Delete (click to delete the desired Ring ID). Loopback Detection The Loopback Detection function is used to detect looped links. By sending detection frames and then checking to see if the frames returned to any port on the device, the function is used to detect loops. Global Settings The Global Settings page allows you to configure the state (enabled or disabled) of the function, select the interval at which frames are transmitted and the delay before recovery. To access this page, click L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Global Settings. Figure 75: L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Global Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 57: L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Global Settings Item Description State Select Enabled or Disabled to set up the loopback mode. Interval Enter the variable in seconds (1 to 32767) to set the interval at which frames are transmitted. Recover Time Enter the variable in seconds (60 to 1000000) to define the delay before recovery. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Loopback Detection Global Information settings are informational only: State, Interval and Recover Time. 63 SE400 SERIES Port Settings The Port Settings page allows you to select ports that are detected by the loopback detection function and configure their status (enabled or disabled). To access this page, click L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Port Settings. Figure 76: L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 58: L2 Switching > Loopback Detection > Port Settings Item Description Port Select Enter the port to define the local loopback detection setting. Enabled Select Enabled or Disabled to set up the Loopback Detection function. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Loopback Detection Port Information settings are informational only: Port, Enable State and Loop Status. 64 SE400 SERIES MAC Address Table The MAC Address Table provides access to the Static MAC Settings, MAC Aging Time, and Dynamic Forwarding. Static MAC The Static MAC page allows you to configure the address for forwarding of packets, the VLAN ID of the listed MAC address and the designated Port. To access this page, click MAC Address Table > Static MAC. Figure 77: MAC Address Table > Static MAC The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 59: MAC Address Table > Static MAC Item Description MAC Address Enter the MAC address to which packets are statically forwarded. VLAN Click the drop-down menu to select the VLAN ID number of the VLAN for which the MAC address is residing. Port Click the drop-down menu to select the port number. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Static MAC Status settings are informational only: No., MAC Address, VLAN, Port and Delete (click to delete the desired MAC address). 65 SE400 SERIES MAC Aging Time The MAC Aging Time page allows you to set the MAC address of the aging time to study. To access this page, click MAC Address Table > MAC Aging Time. Figure 78: MAC Address Table > MAC Aging Time The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 60: MAC Address Table > MAC Aging Time Item Description Aging Time Enter the variable (10 to 630) to define the time required for aging. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Dynamic Address Status settings are informational only: Aging time. Dynamic Forwarding Table The Dynamic Forwarding function allows you to configure an address tables, which contain the following:  The port each hardware address is associated with  The VLAN to show or clear dynamic MAC entries  The MAC address selection To access this page, click MAC Address Table > Dynamic Forwarding Table. Figure 79: MAC Address Table > Dynamic Forwarding Table The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 61: MAC Address Table > Dynamic Forwarding Table Item Description Port Click the drop-down menu to select the port number to show or clear dynamic MAC entries. If a port, VLAN or MAC address is not selected the whole dynamic MAC table is displayed or cleared. VLAN Click the drop-down menu to select the VLAN to show or clear dynamic MAC entries. 66 SE400 SERIES Table 61: MAC Address Table > Dynamic Forwarding Table (Continued) Item Description MAC Address Enter the MAC address to show or clear dynamic MAC entries. If a port, VLAN or MAC address is not selected the whole dynamic MAC table is displayed or cleared. View Click View to display the MAC address information. Clear Click Clear to clear the MAC Address Information table. The ensuing table for MAC Address Information settings are informational only: MAC Address, VLAN, Type, Port and Add to Static MAC (click to add the MAC address to static MAC address list). Security The Security function allows for the configuration of Storm Control, Port Security, Protected Ports, DoS Prevention, Applications, and 802.1x. Storm Control The Storm Control page allows you to set up the units and Preamble/IFG to manage the occurrence of packet flooding on the LAN and consequent traffic to prevent the degrading of network performance. Global Settings To access this page, click Security > Storm Control > Global Settings. Figure 80: Security > Storm Control > Global Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 62: Security > Storm Control > Global Settings Item Description Unit Select pps or bps control units for the Storm Control function. Preamble & IFG Select Excluded or Included to set up the Storm Control Global settings.  Excluded: exclude preamble & IFG (20 bytes) when count ingress storm control rate.  Included: include preamble & IFG (20 bytes) when count ingress storm control rate. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Storm Control Global Information settings are informational only: Unit and Preamble & IFG. 67 SE400 SERIES Port Settings The Port Settings page allows you to configure the port and the type of storm control association along with the value of the storm rate for the selected port. To access this page, click Security > Storm Control > Port Settings. Figure 81: Security > Storm Control > Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 63: Security > Storm Control > Port Settings Item Description Port Enter the port number to designate the local port for the Storm Control function. Port State Select Disabled or Enabled to define the port state Action Click the drop-down menu to select the type of action to designate for the selected port during a Storm Control incident. The options are Drop and Shutdown. Type Enable Click the radio button to enable Broadcast, Unknown Multicast, or Unknown Unicast.  Broadcast: Select the variable in Kbps to define the broadcast bandwidth.  Unknown Multicast: Select the variable in Kbps to define the multicast setting.  Broadcast: Select the variable in Kbps to define the unknown unicast setting. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Storm Control Port Information settings are informational only: Port, Port State, Broadcast (Kbps), Unknown Multicast (Kbps), Unknown Unicast (Kbps) and Action. 68 SE400 SERIES Port Security The Port Security page allows you to configure port isolation behavior. To access this page, click Security > Port Security. Figure 82: Security > Port Security The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 64: Security > Port Security Item Description Port Select Enter a single or multiple port numbers to configure. Enabled Select Enabled or Disabled to define the selected Port. FDB Learn Limit (0-64) Enter the variable (0 to 64) to set the learn limit for the FDB setting. Violation MAC Notification Select Enabled or Disabled to define the selected Port. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Port Security Information settings are informational only: Port, Enabled, FDB Learn Limit and Violation MAC Notification. Protected Ports The Protected Port page allows you to configure a single or multiple ports as a protected or unprotected type. To access this page, click Security > Protected Ports. Figure 83: Security > Protected Ports The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 65: Security > Protected Ports Item Description Port List Enter the port number to designate for the Protected Port setting. Port Type Select Unprotected or Protected to define the port type. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 69 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for Protected Ports Status settings are informational only: Protected Ports and Unprotected Ports. DoS Prevention The DoS Prevention page allows you to set up (enabled or disabled) the denial of service. DoS Global Settings The DoS Global Settings page allows you to configure (enabled or disabled) the setting for each function. To access this page, click Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Global Settings. Figure 84: Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Global Settings 70 SE400 SERIES The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 66: Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Global Settings Item Description DMAC = SMAC Click Enabled or Disabled to define DMAC-SMAC for the DoS Global settings. LAND Click Enabled or Disabled to define LAND for the DoS Global settings. UDP Blat Click Enabled or Disabled to define UDP Blat for the DoS Global settings. TCP Blat Click Enabled or Disabled to define TCP Blat for the DoS Global settings. POD Click Enabled or Disabled to define POD for the DoS Global settings. IPv6 Min Fragment Click Enabled or Disabled to define minimum fragment size for the IPv6 protocol. Enter the variable in bytes (0 to 65535) to set the minimum fragment size when the function is enabled. ICMP Fragments Click Enabled or Disabled to define the ICMP Fragments function. IPv4 Ping Max Size Click Enabled or Disabled to set the maximum ping size for the IPv4 protocol. IPv6 Ping Max Size Click Enabled or Disabled to set a maximum ping size for the IPv6 protocol. Ping Max Size Setting Enter the variable in bytes (0 to 65535) to set the maximum ping size. Smurf Attack Click Enabled or Disabled to set the Smurf Attack function. TCP Min Hdr Size Click Enabled or Disabled to set the minimum header size. Enter the variable in bytes (0 to 31) to set the minimum header size. TCP-SYN (SPORT < 1024) Click Enabled or Disabled to set the TCP synchronization function (sport < 1021). Null Scan Attack Click Enabled or Disabled to set the Null Scan Attack function. X-Mas Scan Attack Click Enabled or Disabled to set the X-Mas Scan function. TCP SYN-FIN Attack Click Enabled or Disabled to set the TCP synchronization termination attack function. TCP SYN-RST Attack Click Enabled or Disabled to set the TCP synchronization reset attack function. TCP Fragment (Offset = Click Enabled or Disabled to set the TCP fragment function (offset =1). 1) Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for DoS Global Information settings are informational only: DMAC = SMAC, Land Attack, UDP Blat, TCP Blat, POD (Ping of Death), IPv6 Min Fragment Size, ICMP Fragment Packets, IPv4 Ping Max Packet Size, IPv6 Ping Max Packet Size, Smurf Attack, TCP Min Header Length, TCP Syn (SPORT < 1024), Null Scan Attack, X-Mas Scan Attack, TCP SYN-FIN Attack, TCP SYN-RST Attack and TCP Fragment (Offset = 1). 71 SE400 SERIES DoS Port Settings The DoS Port Settings page allow you to configure DoS security (enabled or disabled) for the selected port. To access this page, click Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Port Settings. Figure 85: Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 67: Security > DoS Prevention > DoS Port Settings Item Description Port Select the port to configure for the DoS prevention function. DoS Protection Click Enabled or Disabled to set the DoS Port security function state. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for DoS Port Status settings are informational only: Port and DoS Protection. Applications The Applications function allows you to configure various types of AAA lists. HTTP The HTTP page allows you to combine all kinds of AAA lists to the HTTP line. Attempts to access the switch’s Web UI from HTTP are first authenticated. To access this page, click Security > Applications > HTTP. Figure 86: Security > Applications > HTTP The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 68: Security > Applications > HTTP Item Description HTTP Service Click Enabled or Disabled to set up Ethernet encapsulation (remote access) through HTTP function. Session Timeout Enter the variable in minutes (0 to 86400) to define the timeout period for the HTTP session. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 72 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for HTTP Information settings are informational only: HTTP Service and Session Timeout. 802.1x The 802.1x function provides port-based authentication to prevent unauthorized devices (clients) from gaining access to the network. 802.1x Settings The 802.1x Settings page allows you to set the state (enabled or disabled) for the selected IP server address, port, accounting port and associated password, including a re-authentication period. To access this page, click Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Settings. Figure 87: Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 69: Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Settings Item Description State Click Enabled or Disabled to set up 802.1x Setting function. Server IP Enter the IP address of the local server providing authentication function. Server Port Enter the port number (1 to 65535) assigned to the listed Server IP. Accounting Port Enter the port number (1 to 65535) assigned to the listed server IP configured to provide authorization and authentication for network access. Security Key Enter the variable to define the network security key used in authentication. Reauth Period Enter the variable in seconds to define the period of time between authentication attempts. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for 802.1x Information settings are informational only: 802.1x State, Server IP, Server Port, Accounting Port, Security Key and Reauth Period. 73 SE400 SERIES 802.1x Port Configuration The 802.1x Port Configuration page allows you to identify the authorization state for a port by using a MAC or Port authentication base. To access this page, click Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Port Configuration. Figure 88: Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Port Configuration The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 70: Security > 802.1x > 802.1x Port Configuration Item Description Authentication based Click Port or Mac to designate the type of configuration for the 802.1x Port setting. Port Select Enter the port number associated with the configuration setting. State Click Authorize or Disabled to define the listed port’s state mode. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for 802.1x Port Authorization settings are informational only: Port and Port State. 74 SE400 SERIES QoS The QoS function allows you to configure settings for the switch QoS interface and how the switch connects to a remote server to get services. General Traditionally, networks operate on a best-effort delivery basis, all traffic has equal priority and an equal chance of being delivered in a timely manner. When there is congestion, all traffic has an equal chance of being dropped. The QoS feature can be configured for congestion-management and congestion-avoidance to specifically manage the priority of the traffic delivery. Implementing QoS in the network makes performance predictable and bandwidth utilization much more effective. The QoS implementation is based on the prioritization values in Layer 2 frames. QoS Properties The QoS Properties allows you to set the QoS mode. To access this page, click QoS > General > QoS Properties. Figure 89: QoS > General > QoS Properties The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 71: QoS > General > QoS Properties Item Description QoS Mode Select Disabled or Basic to set up the QoS function. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for QoS Global Information settings are informational only: QoS Mode. 75 SE400 SERIES QoS Settings Once the QoS function is enabled, you can configure the available settings. To access this page, click QoS > General > QoS Settings. Figure 90: QoS > General > QoS Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 72: QoS > General > QoS Settings Item Description Port Enter the port number to associate with the QoS setting. CoS Value Click the drop-down menu to designate the Class of Service (CoS) value (0 to 7) for the Port entry. Remark CoS Click Disabled or Enabled to set up the Remark CoS function. When enabled the LAN (preassigned priority values) is marked at Layer 2 boundary to CoS values. Remark DSCP Click Disabled or Enabled to set up the DSCP remark option for the QoS function. Remark IP Precedence Click Disabled or Enabled to set up the Remark IP Precedence for the QoS function. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for QoS Status settings are informational only: Port, CoS value, Remark CoS, Remark DSCP and Remark IP Precedence. 76 SE400 SERIES Queue Scheduling The switch support eight CoS queues for each egress port. For each of the eight queues, two types of scheduling can be configured: Strict Priority and Weighted Round Robin (WRR). Strict Priority scheduling is based on the priority of queues. Packets in a high-priority queue are always sent first and packets in a low-priority queue are only sent after all the high priority queues are empty. Weighted RoundRobin (WRR) scheduling is based on the user priority specification to indicate the importance (weight) of the queue relative to the other CoS queues. WRR scheduling prevents low-priority queues from being completely ignored during periods of high priority traffic. The WRR scheduler sends some packets from each queue in turn. To access this page, click QoS > General > QoS Scheduling. Figure 91: QoS > General > QoS Scheduling The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 73: QoS > General > QoS Scheduling Item Description Queue Queue entry for egress port. Strict Select Strict to assign the scheduling designation to the selected queue. WRR Select WRR to assign the scheduling designation to the selected queue. Weight Enter a queue priority (weight) relative to the defined entries (WRR only). % of WRR Bandwidth Displays the allotted bandwidth for the queue entry in percentage values. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Queue Information settings are informational only: Strict Priority Queue Number. 77 SE400 SERIES CoS Mapping The CoS Mapping allows you to apply CoS mapping. To access this page, click QoS > General > CoS Mapping. Figure 92: QoS > General > CoS Mapping The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 74: QoS > General > CoS Mapping Item Description CoS to Queue Mapping Class of Service Displays the CoS for the queue entry. Queue Click the drop-down menu to select the queue priority for selected CoS Queue to CoS Mapping Queue Displays the queue entry for CoS mapping. Class of Service Click the drop-down menu to select the CoS type Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for CoS Mapping Information settings are informational only: CoS and Mapping to Queue. The ensuing table for Queue Mapping Information settings are informational only: Queue and Mapping to CoS. 78 SE400 SERIES DSCP Mapping The DSCP to Queue mapping function maps queue values in incoming packets to a DSCP value that QoS uses internally to represent the priority of the traffic. The following table shows the DSCP to Queue map. If these values are not appropriate for your network, you need to modify them. To access this page, click QoS > General > DSCP Mapping. Figure 93: QoS > General > DSCP Mapping The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 75: QoS > General > DSCP Mapping Item Description DSCP to Queue Mapping DSCP Enter the DSCP entry to define the precedence values. Queue Click the drop-down menu to select the queue designation for the DSCP value. Queue to DSCP Mapping Queue Displays the queue value for the DSCP map. DSCP Enter the DSCP entry to define the precedence values. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for DSCP Mapping Information settings are informational only: DSCP and Mapping to Queue. The ensuing table for Queue Mapping Information settings are informational only: Queue and Mapping to DSCP. 79 SE400 SERIES IP Precedence Mapping The IP Precedence Mapping allows you to set IP Precedence mapping. To access this page, click QoS > General > IP Precedence Mapping. Figure 94: QoS > General > IP Precedence Mapping The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 76: QoS > General > IP Precedence Mapping Item Description IP Precedence to Queue Mapping IP Precedence Displays the IP precedence value for the queue map. Queue Click the drop-down menu to map a queue value to the selected IP precedence. Queue to IP Precedence Mapping Queue Displays the queue entry for mapping IP precedence values. IP Precedence Click the drop-down menu to map an IP precedence value to the selected queue. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for IP Precedence Mapping Information settings are informational only: IP Precedence and Mapping to Queue. The ensuing table for Queue Mapping Information settings are informational only: Queue and Mapping to IP Precedence. 80 SE400 SERIES QoS Basic Mode Quality of Service (QoS) allows to give preferential treatment to certain types of traffic at the expense of others. Without QoS, the switch offers best-effort service to each packet, regardless of the packet contents or size sending the packets without any assurance of reliability, delay bounds, or throughput. QoS mode supports two modes: 802.1p and DSCP. Global Settings The Global Settings page allows you to configure the trust mode to a port selection. To access this page, click QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Global Settings. The function is only available when QoS Properties is set to Basic. Figure 95: QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Global Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 77: QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Global Settings Item Description Trust Mode Click the drop-down menu to select the trust state of the QoS basic mode. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for QoS Information settings are informational only: Trust Mode. Port Settings The Port Settings page allows you to define a trust state (enabled or disabled) to a listed port. To access this page, click QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Port Settings. Figure 96: QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Port Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 78: QoS > QoS Basic Mode > Port Settings Item Description Port Enter the port number for the QoS basic mode setting. Trust State Select Enabled or Disabled to set the port’s trust state status. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for QoS Port Status settings are informational only: Port and Trust State. 81 SE400 SERIES Rate Limit Rate Limits features control on a per port basis. Bandwidth control is supported for the following: Ingress Bandwidth Control, Egress Bandwidth Control and Egress Queue. Ingress Bandwidth Control The Ingress Bandwidth Control page allows you to configure the bandwidth control for a listed port. To access this page, click QoS > Rate Limit > Ingress Bandwidth Control. Figure 97: QoS > Rate Limit > Ingress Bandwidth Control The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 79: QoS > Rate Limit > Ingress Bandwidth Control Item Description Port Enter the port number for the rate limit set up. State Select Disabled or Enabled to set the port’s state status. Rate (Kbps) Enter the value in Kbps (16 to 1000000) to set as the bandwidth rate for the selected port. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Ingress Bandwidth Control Status settings are informational only: Port and Ingress Rate Limit (Kbps). 82 SE400 SERIES Egress Bandwidth Control The Egress Bandwidth Control page allows you to set the egress bandwidth control for a listed port. To access this page, click QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Bandwidth Control. Figure 98: QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Bandwidth Control The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 80: QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Bandwidth Control Item Description Port Enter the port number to set the Egress Bandwidth Control. State Select Disabled or Enabled to set the Egress Bandwidth Control state. Rate (Kbps) Enter the value in Kbps (16 to 1000000) to set the Egress Bandwidth rate. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Egress Bandwidth Control Status settings are informational only: Port and Egress Rate Limit (Kbps). Egress Queue The Egress Queue page allows you to set the egress bandwidth parameters. To access this page, click QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Queue. Figure 99: QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Queue The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 81: QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Queue Item Description Port Click the drop-down menu to select the port to define the Egress queue. Queue Click the drop-down menu to set the queue order for the Egress setting. State Click Disabled or Enabled to set the Egress queue state. 83 SE400 SERIES Table 81: QoS > Rate Limit > Egress Queue (Continued) Item Description CIR (Kbps) Enter the value in Kbps (16 to 1000000) to set the CIR rate for the Egress queue. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for FE1 Egress Per Queue Status settings are informational only: Queue Id and Egress Rate Limit (Kbps). Management LLDP LLDP is a one-way protocol without request/response sequences. Information is advertised by stations implementing the transmit function, and is received and processed by stations implementing the receive function. LLDP System Settings The LLDP System Settings allows you to configure the status (enabled or disabled) for the protocol, set the interval for frame transmission, set the hold time multiplier and the re-initialization delay. To access this page, click Management > LLDP > LLDP System Settings. Figure 100: Management > LLDP > LLDP System Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 82: Management > LLDP > LLDP System Settings Item Description Enabled Click Enabled or Disabled to set the Global Settings state. LLDP PDU Disable Action Click to select the LLDP PDU handling action when LLDP is globally disabled. Options include: Filtered, Bridged, or Flooded. Transmission Interval Select the interval at which frames are transmitted. The default is 30 seconds, and the valid range is 5 to 32768 seconds. Holdtime Multiplier Select the multiplier on the transmit interval to assign to TTL. Reinitialization Delay Select the delay length before re-initialization. Transmit Delay Select the delay after an LLDP frame is sent. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 84 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for LLDP Global Config settings are informational only: LLDP Enabled, LLDP PDU Disable Action, Transmission Interval, Holdtime Multiplier, Reinitialization Delay and Transmit Delay. LLDP Port Settings The LLDP Port Settings page allows you to configure the state (enabled or disabled) of the selected port. To access this page, click Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings. Figure 101: Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > LLDP Port Configuration The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 83: Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > LLDP Port Configuration Item Description Port Select Enter the port number associated with the LLDP setting. State Click the drop-down menu to select the LLDP port state. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. Figure 102: Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > Optional TLVs Selection The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 84: Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > Optional TLVs Selection Item Description Port Select Enter the port number associated with the TLV (optional) selection. Optional TLV Select Click the drop-down menu to select the LLDP optional TLVs to be carried (multiple selections are allowed).  System Name: To include system name TLV in LLDP frames.  Port Description: To include port description TLV in LLDP frames.  System Description: To include system description TLV in LLDP frames.  System Capability: To include system capability TLV in LLDP frames.  802.3 MAC-PHY:  802.3 Link Aggregation:  802.3 Maximum Frame Size:  Management Address:  802.1 PVID: Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. 85 SE400 SERIES The ensuing table for LLDP Port Status settings are informational only: Port, State and Selected Optional TLVs. Figure 103: Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > VLAN Name TLV VLAN Selection The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 85: Management > LLDP > LLDP Port Settings > VLAN Name TLV VLAN Selection Item Description Port Select Enter the port number to associated with the TLV selection. VLAN Select Select the VLAN Name ID to be carried out (multiple selection is allowed). Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for LLDP Port VLAN TLV Status settings are informational only: Port and Selected VLAN. LLDP Local Device Info The LLDP Local Device Info page allows you to view information regarding network devices, providing that the switch has already obtained LLDP information on the devices. To access this page, click Management > LLDP > LLDP Local Device Info. The ensuing table for Local Device Summary settings are informational only: Chassis ID Subtype, Chassis ID, System Name, System Description, Capabilities Supported, Capabilities Enabled and Port ID Subtype. The ensuing table for Port Status settings are informational only: Port, Selected VLAN and Detail (click the radio box and click Detail to displays the details). LLDP Remote Device Info The LLDP Remote Device Info page allows you to view information about remote devices, LLDP information must be available on the switch. To access this page, click Management > LLDP > LLDP Remote Device Info. Figure 104: Management > LLDP > LLDP Remote Device Info The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 86: Management > LLDP > LLDP Remote Device Info Item Description Detail Click to display the device details. Delete Click to delete the selected devices. Refresh Click to refresh the remote device information list. 86 SE400 SERIES LLDP Overloading To access this page, click Management > LLDP > LLDP Overloading. The ensuing table for LLDP Overloading settings are informational only: Port, Total (Bytes), Left to Send (Bytes), Status and Status (Mandatory TLVs, 802.3 TLVs, Optional TLVs and 802.1 TLVs). SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) is a protocol to facilitate the monitoring and exchange of management information between network devices. Through SNMP, the health of the network or status of a particular device can be determined. SNMP Settings The SNMP Settings page allows you to set the SNMP daemon state (enabled or disabled). To access this page, click Management > SNMP > SNMP Settings. Figure 105: Management > SNMP > SNMP Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 87: Management > SNMP > SNMP Settings Item Description State Click Enabled or Disabled to define the SNMP daemon. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for SNMP Information settings are informational only: SNMP. 87 SE400 SERIES SNMP Community The SNMP Community page provides configuration options for the community. SNMP v1 and SNMP v2c use the group name (Community Name) certification. It’s role is similar to the password function. If SNMP v1 and SNMP v2c are used, you can go directly from the configuration settings to this page to configure the SNMP community. To access this page, click Management > SNMP > SNMP Community. Figure 106: Management > SNMP > SNMP Community The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 88: Management > SNMP > SNMP Community Item Description Community Name Enter a community name (up to 20 characters). Access Right Click the radio box to specify the access level (read only or read write). Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Community Status settings are informational only: No., Community Name, Access Right and Delete (click to delete the desired community name). 88 SE400 SERIES SNMP User Settings The SNMP User Settings page allows you to create SNMP groups. The users have the same level of security and access control permissions as defined by the group settings. To access this page, click Management > SNMP > SNMP User Settings. Figure 107: Management > SNMP > SNMP User Settings The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 89: Management > SNMP > SNMP User Settings Item Description User Name Enter a user name (up to 32 characters) to create an SNMP profile. Access Right Click read-only or read-write to define the access right for the profile. Encrypted Click the option to set the encrypted option for the user setting. Auth-Protocol Click the drop-down menu to select the authentication level: MD5 or SHA. The field requires a user password.  MD5: specify HMAC-MD5-96 authentication level  SHA: specify HMAC-SHA authentication protocol Password Enter the characters to define the password associated with the authentication protocol. Priv-Protocol Click the drop-down menu to select an authorization protocol: none or DES.The field requires a user password.  None: no authorization protocol in use  DES: specify 56-bit encryption in use Password Enter the characters to define the password associated with the authorization protocol. Add Click Add to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for User Status settings are informational only: User Name, Access Right, Auth-Protocol, Priv-Protocol and Delete (click to delete the desired user name). 89 SE400 SERIES SNMP Trap The SNMP Trap page allows you to set the IP address of the node and the SNMP credentials corresponding to the version that is included in the trap message. To access this page, click Management > SNMP > SNMP Trap. Figure 108: Management > SNMP > SNMP Trap The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 90: Management > SNMP > SNMP Trap Item Description IP Address Enter the IP address to designate the SNMP trap host. Community Name Click the drop-down menu to select a defined community name. Version Click the drop-down menu to designate the SNMP version credentials (v1 or v2c). Add Click Add to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Trap Host Status settings are informational only: No., IP Address, Community Name, Version and Delete (click to delete the desired IP address). 90 SE400 SERIES Diagnostics Through the Diagnostics function configuration of settings for the switch diagnostics is available. Cable Diagnostics The Cable Diagnostics page allows you to select the port for applying a copper test. To access this page, click Diagnostics > Cable Diagnostics. Figure 109: Diagnostics > Cable Diagnostics The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 91: Diagnostics > Cable Diagnostics Item Description Port Click the drop-down menu to select a pre-defined port for diagnostic testing. Giga ports are displayed with a channel A to D designation. Copper Test Click Copper Test to display the test result for the selected port. The ensuing table for Test Result settings are informational only: Port, Channel A, Cable Length A, Channel B, Cable Length B, Channel C, Cable Length C, Channel D and Cable Length D. 91 SE400 SERIES Ping Test The Ping Test page allows you to configure the test log page. To access this page, click Diagnostics > Ping Test. Figure 110: Diagnostics > Ping Test The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 92: Diagnostics > Ping Test Item Description IP Address Enter the IP address or host name of the station to ping. The initial value is blank. The IP Address or host name you enter is not retained across a power cycle. Host names are composed of series of labels concatenated with periods. Each label must be between 1 and 63 characters long, maximum of 64 characters. Count Enter the number of echo requests to send. The default value is 4. The value ranges from 1 to 5. The count entered is not retained across a power cycle. Interval (in sec) Enter the interval between ping packets in seconds. The default value is 1. The value ranges from 1 to 5. The interval entered is not retained across a power cycle. Size (in bytes) Enter the size of ping packet. The default value is 56. The value ranges from 8 to 5120. The size entered is not retained across a power cycle. Ping Results Display the ping reply format. Apply Click Apply to display ping result for the IP address. 92 SE400 SERIES IPv6 Ping Test The IPv6 Ping Test page allows you to configure the Ping Test for IPv6. To access this page, click Diagnostics > IPv6 Ping Test. Figure 111: Diagnostics > IPv6 Ping Test The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 93: Diagnostics > IPv6 Ping Test Item Description IPv6 Address Enter the IP address or host name of the station you want the switch to ping. The initial value is blank. The IP Address or host name you enter is not retained across a power cycle. Host names are composed of series of labels concatenated with dots. Each label must be between 1 and 63 characters long, and the entire hostname has a maximum of 64 characters. Count Enter the number of echo requests you want to send. The default value is 4. The value ranges from 1 to 5. The count you enter is not retained across a power cycle. Interval (in sec) Enter the interval between ping packets in seconds. The default value is 1. The value ranges from 1 to 5. The interval you enter is not retained across a power cycle. Size (in bytes) Enter the size of ping packet. The default value is 56. The value ranges from 8 to 5120. The size you enter is not retained across a power cycle. 93 SE400 SERIES Table 93: Diagnostics > IPv6 Ping Test (Continued) Item Description Ping Results Display the ping reply format. PING 2222::777 (2222::777): 56 data bytes --- 2222::777 ping statistics --4 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss Or PING 2222::717 (2222::717): 56 data bytes 64 bytes from 2222::717: icmp6_seq=0 ttl=128 time=10.0 ms 64 bytes from 2222::717: icmp6_seq=1 ttl=128 time=0.0 ms 64 bytes from 2222::717: icmp6_seq=2 ttl=128 time=0.0 ms 64 bytes from 2222::717: icmp6_seq=3 ttl=128 time=0.0 ms --- 2222::717 ping statistics --4 packets transmitted, 4 packets received, 0% packet loss round-trip min/avg/max = 0.0/2.5/10.0 ms Apply Click Apply to display ping result for the IP address. System Log Logging Service The Logging Service page allows you to set up the logging services feature for the system log. To access this page, click Diagnostics > System Log > Logging Service. Figure 112: Diagnostics > System Log > Logging Service The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 94: Diagnostics > System Log > Logging Service Item Description Logging Service Click Enabled or Disabled to set the Logging Service status. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Logging Information settings are informational only: Logging Service. 94 SE400 SERIES Local Logging The Local Logging page allows you to designate a local target when the severity criteria is reached. To access this page, click Diagnostics > System Log > Local Logging. Figure 113: Diagnostics > System Log > Local Logging The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 95: Diagnostics > System Log > Local Logging Item Description Target Enter the local logging target. Severity Click the drop-down menu to select the severity level for local log messages. The level options are:  emerg: Indicates system is unusable. It is the highest level of severity  alert: Indicates action must be taken immediately  crit: Indicates critical conditions  error: Indicates error conditions  warning: Indicates warning conditions  notice: Indicates normal but significant conditions  info: Indicates informational messages  debug: Indicates debug-level messages Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Local Logging Settings Status settings are informational only: Status, Target, Severity and Delete (click to delete the desired target). 95 SE400 SERIES System Log Server The System Log Server page allows you to configure the log server. To access this page, click Diagnostics > System Log > System Log Server. Figure 114: Diagnostics > System Log > System Log Server The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 96: Diagnostics > System Log > System Log Server Item Description Server Address Enter the IP address of the log server. Server Port Enter the Udp port number of the log server. Severity Click the drop-down menu to select the severity level for local log messages. The default is emerg. The level options are:  emerg: Indicates system is unusable. It is the highest level of severity  alert: Indicates action must be taken immediately  crit: Indicates critical conditions  error: Indicates error conditions  warning: Indicates warning conditions  notice: Indicates normal but significant conditions  info: Indicates informational messages  debug: Indicates debug-level messages Facility Click the drop-down menu to select facility to which the message refers. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Remote Logging Setting Status settings are informational only: Status, Server Info, Severity, Facility and Delete (click to delete the desired server address). 96 SE400 SERIES DDM The DDM page allows you to set up the diagnostic alarm status. To access this page, click Diagnostics > DDM. Figure 115: Diagnostics > DDM The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 97: Diagnostics > DDM Item Description Diagnostic Alarm Click the drop-down menu to designate the announcement method: Disabled, SysLog, E-mail, or SNMP. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Diagnostic Alarm Information settings are informational only: Diagnostic Alarm. Figure 116: Diagnostics > DDM > Diagnostic Alarm Information The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 98: Diagnostics > DDM > Diagnostic Alarm Information Item Description High Alarm Click Enabled or Disabled to set the alarm state. High Warning Click Enabled or Disabled to set the alarm state. Low Alarm Click Enabled or Disabled to set the alarm state. Low Warning Click Enabled or Disabled to set the alarm state. Apply Click Apply to save the values and update the screen. The ensuing table for Vendor Info settings are informational only: Refresh (click to reload the vendor information), Port, Connector, Speed, VendorName, VendorOui, VendorPn, VendorRev, VendorSn and DateCode. 97 SE400 SERIES Tools IXM The IXM tool is an industrial Ethernet switch solution to help the users deploy industrial Ethernet switch hardware by allowing users with multiple, managed Ethernet switches in the field to eliminate the need to individually connect to each device to configure it. To access this page, click Tools > IXM. Figure 117: Tools > IXM The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 99: Tools > IXM Item Description Search Field Enter criteria to search the IXM information. # Displays the reference to the device number. Device Name Displays the device name. Device Model Displays the device model type. Category Displays the device’s category type. IP Address Displays the device’s IP address. MAC Address Displays the device’s IP MAC address. Firmware Version Displays the device’s firmware version. Previous Click Previous to back to previous page. Next Click Next to go to next page. 98 SE400 SERIES Backup Manager The Backup Manager page allows you to configure a remote TFTP sever or host file system in order to backup the firmware image or configuration file. To access this page, click Tools > Backup Manager. Figure 118: Tools > Backup Manager The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 100: Tools > Backup Manager Item Description Backup Method Click the drop-down menu to select the backup method: TFTP or HTTP. Server IP Enter the IP address of the backup server. Backup Type Click a type to define the backup method: image: running configuration, startup configuration, or buffered log. Image Choose the image to backup. Backup Click Backup to backup the settings. 99 SE400 SERIES Upgrade Manager The Upgrade Manager page allows you to configure a remote TFTP sever or host file system in order to upload firmware upgrade images or configuration files. To access this page, click Tools > Upgrade Manager. Figure 119: Tools > Upgrade Manager The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 101: Tools > Upgrade Manager Item Description Upgrade Method Click the drop-down menu to select the upgrade method: TFTP or HTTP. Server IP Enter the IP address of the upgrade server. File Name Enter the file name of the new firmware version. Upgrade Type Click a type to define the upgrade method: image, startup configuration, or running configuration. Image Choose the image to upgrade. Upgrade Click Upgrade to upgrade to the current version. 100 SE400 SERIES Dual Image The Dual Image page allows you to set up an active and backup partitions for firmware image redundancy. To access this page, click Tools > Dual Image. Figure 120: Tools > Dual Image The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 102: Tools > Dual Image Item Description Active Image Click the format for the image type: Partition0 (Active) or Partition1 (backup). Save Click Save to save and keep the new settings. The ensuing table for Image Information 0/1 settings are informational only: Flash Partition, Image Name, Image Size and Created Time. Save Configuration To access this page, click Tools > Save Configuration. Click Save Configuration to FLASH to have configuration changes you have made to be saved across a system reboot. All changes submitted since the previous save or system reboot will be retained by the switch. 101 SE400 SERIES User Account The User Account page allows you to set up a user and the related parameters. To access this page, click Tools > User Account. Figure 121: Tools > User Account The following table describes the items in the previous figure. Table 103: Tools > User Account Item Description User Name Enter the name of the new user entry. Password Type Click the drop-down menu to define the type of password: Clear Text, Encrypted or No Password. Password Enter the character set for the define password type. Retype Password Retype the password entry to confirm the profile password. Privilege Type Click the drop-down menu to designate privilege authority for the user entry: Admin or User. Apply Click Apply to create a new user account. The ensuing table for Local Users settings are informational only: User Name, Password Type, Privilege Type and Delete (click to delete the desired user account). Reset System To access this page, click Tools > Reset System. Click Restore to have all configuration parameters reset to their factory default values. All changes that have been made will be lost, even if you have issued a save. Reset settings take effect after a system reboot. Reboot Device To access this page, click Tools > Reboot Device. Click Reboot to reboot the switch. Any configuration changes you have made since the last time you issued a save will be lost. 102 SE400 SERIES TROUBLESHOOTING Verify that you are using the right power cord/adapter (DC 12-48V), please don't use the power adapter with DC output higher than 48V, or it may damage this device. Select the proper UTP/STP cable to construct the user network. Use unshielded twisted-pair (UTP) or shield twisted-pair (STP) cable for RJ-45 connections that depend on the connector type the switch equipped: 100R Category 3, 4 or 5 cable for 10Mbps connections, 100R Category 5 cable for 100Mbps connections, or 100R Category 5e/above cable for 1000Mbps connections. Also be sure that the length of any twisted-pair connection does not exceed 100 meters (328 feet). R = replacement letter for Ohm symbol. Diagnosing LED Indicators: To assist in identifying problems, the switch can be easily monitored through panel indicators, which describe common problems the user may encounter and where the user can find possible solutions. If the power indicator does not light on when the power cord is plugged in, you may have a problem with power cord. Then check for loose power connections, power losses or surges at power outlet. If you still cannot resolve the problem, contact the local dealer for assistance. If the LED indicators are normal and the connected cables are correct but the packets still cannot be transmitted. Please check the user system's Ethernet devices' configuration or status. ADVANTECH B+B SMARTWORX TECHNICAL SUPPORT Phone: 1-800-346-3119 (Monday - Friday, 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. CST) Fax: 815-433-5109 Email: support@advantech-bb.com Web: www.advantech-bb.com 103
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